tv The Five FOX News July 12, 2016 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT
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>> all right. well, here we are, heading into the convention. >> wait for that rose and see what happens. >> i love the comparison. i'm sure newt did as well. shelby holiday, thank you. that is it for your world. i'm sandra smith. thanks for joining us. hello, i'm kimberly guilfoyle along with juan williams eric bolling greg gutfeld and dana perrino. i understand how americans are feeling. dallas, i'm here to say we must reject such despair. i'm here to insist that we are
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not as divided as we seem. i know we'll make it because of what i have experienced in my own life. what i've seen of this country and its people. and i understand that these protests -- i see them. they can be messy. sometimes they can be hijacked by an irresponsible few. even those who dislike the phrase "black lives matter," surely we should be able to hear the pain of alton sterling's family. we know there is evil in this world. that's why we need police departments. but as americans we can decide that people like this killer will ultimately fail. they will not drive us apart. >> president george w. bush also spoke, delivering these moving remarks. >> none of us were prepare d or
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could be prepared for an ambush by hatred and malice. the shock of this evil still has not faded. at times it feels like the forces pulling us apart are stronger than the forces binding us together. argument turns too easily into animosity. disagreement escalates too quickly into dehumanization. too often we judge other groups by their worst examples while judging ourselves by our best intentions. and this has strained our bonds of understanding and common purpose. at our best we know we have one country, one future, one destiny. we do not want the unity of grief nor do we want the unity of fear. we want the unity of hope, affection and high purpose. >> all right. obviously, very moving remarks and dana, to see your former boss there, speaking to that crowd, what were your thoughts? >> i thought it was perhaps one
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of his best. but that's because maybe we haven't heard from him in a long time. he hasn't given a speech like this for a while. his somber addresses are some of the most remarkable, because i think that he strips away a lot of excess language. he tries to keep it very focused and very about the moment. so i like when he said in terms of a strained unity and we do not want unity of fear. i think that was a really important moment. i think if you are a student of politics or if you are a student of speech writing, it would be one to read and watch. but he also came to this not as just a former president but dallas is really where he -- i don't think grew up, but became a man, right? that's where he started a business. that's where he and mrs. bush decided to live. he was part owner of the rangers, texas rangers, helped to build the stadium there that he runs. very personal moment for him. i think that everybody was glad that both president obama and that the former president were
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there. >> an opportunity to show unity in the country, where there has been such great divide. >> yeah. and i thought george -- president bush's delivery was fantastic. his speech was fantastic. president obama, can i just be a little bit critical? look, this is a moment -- i know, it's heartfelt and this is a moment, but do you really have to bring up black -- do you even have to mention black lives matter and alton sterling during this whole -- during this thing? i found it wasn't the appropriate time to do that. there's plenty of time to talk about what led up to it, what didn't lead up to it. come on, this is a moment where five police officers were shot. this is a memorial service for them. >> murdered. >> murdered. and let's -- i would just focus on that and not bring up any kind of politics or raise controversy whatsoever? >> greg, how did you see the juxtaposition between the two remarks? >> well, i don't know. i -- in every case, the word that we always hear is unity. we talk about unity a lot. but we have to be honest with
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ourselves, that unity is really, really boring and divisiveness is really, really exciting. we live in a time of great leisure where people have a lot of free time. where do they spend their free time? they spend their free time on social networks, talking to each other in abusive ways and indulging the impulse of divisiveness. so it's not simply about like can we be unified. it's about teaching ourselves to resist the impulse of divisiveness, which is different. once you resist the divisiveness, then you have to fill that hole with something else. then you're forced to think about what is that thing? what is that thing? should i be reading more, thinking more? should i be going to church, spending more time with my community? should i be getting off twitter and social networks and start talking to people? should i be marching and start joining? look at memorials. memorials mark an event in history. we don't do that anymore.
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we don't stop and think. we just keep rolling on and keep rolling on and keep rolling on. and i think that's why these things are such a nomaly. to sit there and listen. we don't do that anymore. next week we'll be talking about something else, in three days we'll be talking about something else. >> in five minutes. >> in the b block. >> exactly. >> so unity, hope, connection and also to remember and honor? >> without a doubt. i was really appreciative of the fact that you had president obama and president bush there, because i thought it was an example for the nation of reaching across the racial divide. and both of them, i think, had to do, to my mind, a political balancing act. because, you know, i get upset when eric president obama had to mention black lives matter. of course. black america wants to hear this president, our first black president, speak to the anguish black people feel about violence by police against black people.
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>> at a memorial service? >> yeah. >> for five fallen officers? is that the place and the time? >> that's exactly the place. >> wow! >> if he didn't do it there, he would be a chicken. right now what we heard was this murderous crazy man, someone that the president, by the way, described as demented and filled not only with dementia but racial hate, that's what president obama said, that he was reacting to the previous examples and said he wanted to kill white people and especially white cops because of what had happened in minnesota and baton rouge. so, eric, you can't go -- >> juan, that's not what he said. >> that's exactly what he said. >> i'll quote him. surely, we should be able to hear the pain of alton sterling's family. the memorial to alton sterling not the five officers they were there to memorialize. >> let me just offer you something that the president said. it comes from the gospel of john. he said let us love not with words or speech but with action and in truth. this goes back to what greg was talking about. it's not just about the words.
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it's going to take actions, not just people sitting on the couch, listening, pointing fingers and saying the other guy gets it or doesn't get it and i'm right. it's about people saying we have to heal america. we have a problem here. and if you say let's go to a fantasy and not talk about black people because black people's anger -- >> no. fix the problem but do it tomorrow. not at a memorial service. >> he is the president of the united states. >> it was for those five officers and those families. >> making a speech and when it's appropriate to do so versus a funeral memorial for five fallen officers. >> if he went to the funeral at alton sterling and philando castile and didn't mention the horrors of police -- people attacking police, you would go crazy. >> what some say is a conflicting message. >> i think i really heard enough from the president on this issue and i think most of the country has. people call it nuance.
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i call it equal occasion. he has talked out of both sides of his mouth. we need law and order on the streets but you need to sympathize or empathize with the black lives matter movement and their grievances. he wants to have it both ways. what he has really done is play into this false narrative by winking at the black lives matter movement, treating them as some sort of modern day, you kn know, naacp, circa 1955, which they are not. >> your thoughts on jason's comments? >> two things. president obama did bring up immediately the importance of the rule of law. and that's -- i mean, that's key here. black lives matter, they have violated the law. they've blocked freeways, highways, keep people from getting home and stuff like that and see that as part of a greater mission. there is a middle ground between juan and eric. there are deep concerns among the black community, obviously, about what is going on in this country.
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black lives matter, to me, is al sharpton by committee. it's angela davis in a mob. i don't think it addresses -- when i hear juan speak, i don't hear black lives matter. i hear the traditional civil rights voice. i don't see al sharpton and martin luther king together in the same group. but somehow black lives matter in the world of identity politics, it has evolved into a tribal faction where they use grievances to dismantle our society. it's not about joining a community. it's about splitting it apart. that's what i see as the difference between black lives matter and previous civil rights movements. not that i'm any expert at this at all. >> but you're trying. >> yes. >> dana, what do you think? kind of compare this to what we heard from chief brown, the dallas police department and saying hey if you want to be part of the solution, please, come into our police department, fill out an application, join with us to take these neighborhoods in the right
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direction and really bring unity and peace. >> the nation has certainly benefited from getting to know chief dave brown of dallas, what a person to emulate, and a leader. i also believe that the work that -- if you have a concern, if you're a part of black lives matter and you want to get something done, that work does have to happen outside of the protests. it has to be -- should become before but at least should be simultaneous. one thing i always thought is what are the five things you really want? what are the five things that could actually be done? that's how you start to have a civil discourse in order to achieve something. the protest often comes after frustration that that process isn't moving along. for some reason now we've left ahead of that. now i believe there's enough compassion to go around for the family members that were grieving today at the memorial service as well as for the family members that lost the loved ones that they cared about during the police shootings.
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but i do think that the work has to be done outside of the protests in order for them to see any sort of solution. >> but there are -- i mean, even andrew young mentioned this and got some flack for it. there are people that only protest for the sake of protesting. >> yeah. >> that's probably true in every realm of life. there are the people who are just there to get the attention or career path. i will say this. the dallas chief of police is the new face of civil rights. >> and that was going to be my talking point for this. jason riley is right, president obama has been talking out of both sides of his mouth as recently as the night of the shootings. at one point in poland he said the race divided is a problem. we need to fix this. he comes back to the podium after the five officers were shot and saying the nation isn't as divided as we seem to be. whereas chief david brown is the opposite. we are one. we need to unite. he has been nothing but perfect at race relations in america whereas president obama has been nothing but divisive. >> wait a minute.
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the police chief says we've got to come together. obama says we come together. but you pick because you hate on obama so much. the first post racial president in america, right? >> the guy is trying to speak to people on both sides of a divisive issue. you say he shouldn't speak to them. >> president obama should take a page, a cue, page from chief david brown's playbook. >> well, i do think -- i have to commend president obama yesterday. we weren't there to be a fly on the wall but he met with law enforcement groups and asked them, you know, are my words bothering you? apparently a couple of the law enforcement groups there said, yes. it's been a problem because of why and a few other groups said no, it's not been a problem. at least maybe he has heard that he's not getting his message across. so he's at least wanting to listen to critics. >> words that came today from president bush. president bush said don't judge the other guy by their worst examples and then say that --
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oh, but i have my best intentions. that inhibits real honest debate. hats off to president bush. >> i'm going to leave it right there. some in the mainstream media are scolding the dallas police for using a robot to kill the gunman. is their outrage justified? those critics, greg takes them on next. what groovy tunes? oh, my god -- will we listen to while we're on the bus? our favorite playlist. it's all coming up on "the five." don't miss it.
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the great thing about tv, it's full of people who know so much more than everyone else. questioning a decision to use a robot to kill a madman. after hours of negotiations in which the killer expressed joy over killing a few police officers and was dying to kill more, it was clear, he was better off dead. so dallas pd sent in a robot to kill a fiend. of course, the media wondered if this is just more proof of militarization, a move toward cold, metallic methodology. >> these robots can do pretty
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much anything a person can do, go up dstairs, communicate and these arms will typically be used to investigate a suspicious package. some police departments have used them to do things like deliver tear gas to subdue a suspect. for a police department to use a robot to kill, that was unprecedented. >> the discussion is really about how this is just the latest example of law enforcement turning to military tactics for domestic policing and whether that's simply what comes with a more heavily armed society. >> okay. so this questionable tactics went too far, the police adopted military tactics for domestic policing? that was stolen from the wars in iraq and afghanistan? my response? so what? use it. the creep that killed five already put an end. given the relentless scrutiny
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now directed at exposing the errors of our human police officer s. aren't machines the answer? you can't have it both ways. you can't expect officers to act like robots and then whine when robots assume their duty. and you can't ever accuse a robot of racial bias. in time will it be self-driving patrol cars operated by soulless, single-minded bots? you hope not. you don't want a perfect police force. you want a human one. for now that robot killing a fiend, that was a life-saving act learned by the battlefield. so to paraphrase, war, what is it good for? absolutely something. so, dana, how can you question the police on this? i don't get it. >> military tactics that were perpetrated were against somebody who had been trained in the military. >> yes. >> and was using that training in order to commence the attack. you don't bring community policing to a gunfight with a sniper. the other thing is, what we trust in our police is that you
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get the training you need to do so your instincts are, protect me without you having to think about it. i don't want them to think about it too much. they probably thought, look, i'm sending a robot. is it better they send in a robot rather than have another police officer shoot a suspect? >> could you imagine, eric eric they sent in a human or dog and that person were injured? why didn't you send a robot? >> yes and replace american sniper with a terrorist. and then everyone would be for it, right? anyone pushing back on it would say kill the terrorist who wants to kill a bunch of people. but now because the twist is that it's an american and it's a regular former military guy. deserve due process, i guess that's the pushback on it. i would agree with both of you. you know the guy already killed people. you've seen him kill people. >> and he said he wanted to kill more. >> even if he wasn't the guy who perpetrated the original -- he's holding an arsenal and wants to
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kill people. put him down. get him out of the game. >> as usual, i am the skunk at the garden party. >> no kidding. >> this, too? >> i've got to -- i just think if you, as americans, living under -- say you know what? we're going to let agents of the state and potentially tyrranical state, use military force against their own citizens -- >> catapult. >> they had the opportunity, greg, to talk to him. usually people use robots to talk. >> they talked to him for hours. >> but i'm saying, at that point, you could say to the guy, we can explode this, whatever, but stop. because what you don't want to do is have a situation where you have a suspect who says you don't really want to have a trial. it's just so bothersome. >> okay. >> yeah, yeah. i think they would have wanted to keep him alive to find out if he had any come poliaccomplices
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realized it was impossible. i know you want to destroy juan. go. >> one ethical dilemma for me. i would do it again. to use a robot, i would use as many necessary to save our officers' lives. i'm not ashamed to say it. >> there you go. >> charming discussion. bottom line is when you have a public safety threat like that, where somebody has said that he has ieds across the city, that he wants to kill cops, he wants to kill white people. obviously trained in military tactics, has a military background, has body armor on, there are no civilian casualties or collateral damage around, you have isolated, identified the threat, it is ongoing. they have the legal right to use deadly force. by the way, your guy, president obama, super happy with the predator drones. why you have a problem with this robot? >> predator drones we use against a military enemy. >> oh. >> oh. >> this is --
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>> interesting. >> last week, tucker was sitting here, tucker carlson, our friend, and he said hey, i worry that the police are going to be nationalized and militarized. there's a reason americans don't have a national police force and we don't allow them to use military equipment. >> it was the world's slowest catapult. we've got to go, you guys. go ahead. >> would you recommend a kill shot if one of the officers had -- >> same thing. it's the same thing. >> flag on the play. >> just a bigger bullet and it moved slower. after weeks of waiting, bernie sanders finally endorses his former rival, hillary clinton. boy, was that awkward. how will his support impact the presidential race? details next. think fixing your windshield is a big hassle? not with safelite. this family needed their windshield replaced but they're daughters heart was set on going to the zoo. so guess what, i met them at the zoo. service that fits your schedule. that's another safelite advantage. ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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staying in rhythm, it's how i try to live, how i stay active. and to keep up this pace, i need the right nutrition. so i drink boost®. boost® complete nutritional drink has 26 essential vitamins and minerals, including calcium and vitamin d to support strong bones, and 10 grams of protein to help maintain muscle. in three delicious flavors. i'm not about to swim in the slow lane. stay strong. stay active with boost®. >> some good news and bad news for hillary clinton today.
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hillary feeling the bern. endorsing clinton a month after she clinched the nomination. sanders making the case for now why he's backing his former democratic rival. >> this campaign is not really about hillary clinton or donald trump or bernie sanders or any other candidate who sought the presidency. this campaign is about the needs of the american people and addressing the very serious crises that we face. and there is no doubt in my mind that as we head into november, hillary clinton is far and away the best candidate to do that. >> clinton took the opportunity to fire shots at donald trump, this time targeting his economic record. >> i will promise you this. senator sanders and i will spare no effort to make sure the people of america know that,
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once again, trump and his cronies are trying to pull the wool over our eyes and come back with the same failed policies that hurt us before. we're not going to let them get away with it again. >> and bad news for hillary, her e-mail scandal still haunting her, 56% disapprove of the fbi's decision not to charge her while 57% are worried about how the scandal will affect her abilities as president. juan, on that, good day, bad day for hillary? bad polls but bernie sanders -- >> bernie sanders has a lasting effect. lots of democratic sanders' supporters who were slow to come around to hillary, something you pointed out to me frequently. i think the sight of bernie standing up there. also remember, bernie has pushed hillary to the left on health care. now she's considering single payer, on paying for college tuition. on immigration.
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on trade. he has got her to say she opposes these trade deals. these are important elements to bring along younger people and a lot of the folks who have been slow to embrace hillary clinton. >> politics. so a couple of months ago, he's destroying her up and down about her ties to wall street, about how she is tone deaf on so many things. >> trade. >> now he's patting her. >> i always found this moment in politics to be one of my most uncomfortable to watch. i've never had to do it. it happens both for republicans and democrats, where it's like, oh, wow, just last week i was saying you were unqualified and a disgrace but today i'm on board. that's very awkward. it's like ripping a band-aid off. the winner here is the american people. we no longer have to pay for bernie sanders u.s. secret service protection, which was outrageous in my opinion. also losers today, moderate democrats. there's no place for them to go because the party has moved so far left. >> there might be a place for them to go. >> according to donald trump
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they're like come on over. build a big tent. we want to embrace and include the bernie sanders' supporters and libertarians, moderate democrats to say this is something that's more in keeping with the ideas that you have. we have to reach out, right, there's so many swing states and everything in play. branch it. >> greg, you have a cornucopia of things to talk about. >> lovely awkward marriage going on there. he won. he actually won. he turned hillary into a bernie hologram. he just endorsed himself because she adopted all of his causes. >> true. >> right now we'll see hillary performing bernie karaoke. >> i don't understand why they have to yell all the time. they would benefit from taking their foot off the gas a little bit when you're in front of a crowd like that. use the time to yell when it's appropriate. you yell the entire time, no one is going to listen to you. >> greg makes a very good point. he went through minimum wage,
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free tuition, free this, free that. she's clapping in the back. can donald trump paint her with this completely leftist view of what she thinks america should be? >> hold on. donald trump thinks minimum wage should go up, too. >> fair. >> true but does he think free tuition, free health care? >> he also thought health care should be approved and changed. that's difficult. i was listening to kimberly. i thought you were making a good point. then i thought, wait a minute. but the option for even moderate democrats that dana was talking about but anyone who says i'm thinking hillary clinton -- oh, my god, she's running against donald trump. oh, hillary, how are you? let's talk. >> okay, juan. it's a race to the bottom. >> hillary, let's talk. >> someone is going to win it. >> no credibility. horrible, unfavorable -- >> bottom of the bottle for me. >> anti-police rhetoric from some black lives matter members heats up in the wake of the recent cop shootings. juan takes on the radical movement directly ahead.
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♪ in the wake of the roent police killings, some in the black lives matter movement seem to be adding fuel to the fire during these tense times with their rhetoric. >> it's racist. it's bizarre to me. not just because black people don't have the institutional power to be racist or employ racism. >> it has been under assault, kind of the occupation of police who are operating as an occupying force rather than a force that is supposed to protect and serve all of the people. >> the complexity of the american history around structural and institutional racism. it's very difficult to talk about. it's very difficult to tackle because america has such an
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investment in white supremacy. >> we need to abolish the police, period. >> abolish the police? >> disarm the police and we need to come up with community solutions for transform active justice. >> you know, in the spirit of honest discussion, which i have been counseling for all of us here at the table, let me just say honestly, first you have to begin by saying some people, like this woman talking about abolish the police. out of her mind. right? then you move on and say oh, but wait a second. what about the agenda? what about black lives matter agenda? i wrote recently the biggest losers in this political year have been black lives matter. why? they have no agenda. they tried to shut down hillary clinton, bernie sanders. they stand up and say we know what should be done. guess what, president obama said they're like a vessel without a destination. guess what? andrew young, martin luther king's aide, as greg mentioned earlier in the show, you have people who go off and act testy
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without actually having an agenda. right? you come to this and say, hey, what do you guys think? you don't understand. there are legitimate grievances, things we honestly have to discuss. but what you're doing is not only distracting from the real issue, you're giving ammunition to everybody on the other side who says those are a bunch of naughty jerks and children who don't understand the seriousness of what's taking place. so i see congressional black caucus, state and local leaders talking about how to do better. make black communities safer, offer more jobs in the black community, better schools. i see black lives matter too often just going off. so that's my honest criticism of black lives matter, dr. bolling. >> was that a question? >> you're 100% right. what happened in the a block when he said it's okay for president obama to be mentioning that group that you just destroyed there? rightfully so. you're right. they don't have an agenda. their agenda is disrupt, not fix
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and solve. i agree with you in the b block not the a block. >> in the a block they have a legitimate -- there's a real issue about police violence and police relations with especially -- not only black communities in general but poor, black neighborhoods. >> two juans don't make a right. >> exactly. exactly. >> true. >> go ahead, gregory. >> you know what? every political movement has good people and hucksters and charlatans. do you know who did a lot of that? white people did it in -- look at -- remember the '7 0s filled with tv evangelists who turned out to be absolute frauds? they cheated on their wives and took money? every group has their right to have their own losers but within the group you need to point out the losers, hucksters and charlatans and say get out! >> it feels like you're under assault from the critics, but
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it's so important. that's why people who criticize swra jackson or sharpton, they're doing it because they have the best of the community and don't want to open it up to the charlatans. >> i am troubled that there are so many people in our country who are afraid of cops and that they go through something that i don't go through. i've never been afraid to drive at night. i don't tense up when i walk by a cop. and i don't have to deal with that kind of thing. so i understand now better, over the past several years, it actually is real. but again going back to the a block, so solving a problem behind the scenes, where does that start and where does that agenda begin? i'm willing to be part of it. i just don't know actually where to go. >> i think that's the idea is you're willing to take action and get involved. not just sit on the sideline. >> sure. >> so, kimberly, one thing that caught my attention was mark lamont hill saying black people can't be racist because we don't
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have power. i know a lot of racist black people. >> right. that's just like a conversation right there. even president obama behind closed door meetings said let's compare this to the dylan rupp shooting and compare the two of them. you have to be honest and sit down and listen to both sides. that's the quarrel i have to vitriolic rhetoric, and shouting people down that has really come to symbolize black lives matter. rightly or wrongly. they might have good intentions. what i'm looking at is the conduct, the rhetoric and the actions, which i think are really problematic. >> all right. i don't have any trouble with people calling out legitimate grievance. but, boy, you guys got to get your act together. directly ahead, three days away from the kickoff to our exciting road trip. yes! we're going to the convention. >> i know. >> what song will we be rocking out to in our bus?
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yesterday we were excited to show you the amazing bus that will take us to the convention, loaded with cool snacks. but no road trip would be complete without some fun music along the way. we spent this morning trying to think about what are our favorite songs for the play list. we've each chosen our top five favorite songs. i was scarred when i was in first grade and the only rock band i had ever heard of was reo speedwagon and made fun of me because his was ac/dc. i'm always embarrassed to say what my favorite songs are. let's see, i have -- free and easy down the road i go by dierks bentley. we can play a little bit of that, right? >> that's through the end. >> american saturday night by brad paisley. take me home, country roads, john denver. everyone knows the words to that.
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you have need songs that people can sing to. you'll have to learn that song so that you can sing along with me, kg. >> is it girl crush make your list? >> it did not. it was on my top 15. original e-mail asking for 15 songs. she's in love with the boy by tricia yearwood and all american by levi lowrie. "all american," i encourage you to download it. you will crack up. >> you wanted to make all ten d dierks bentley. >> i had about 30 songs to g we have to give a round to everybody else. eric, you're next. >> i usually bump in the block with a country sboong and bump t of the block with cool rock shall pop. the rolling stones sympathy for the devil, come together, aerosmith version. not the beatles version.
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and baba o'riley, kashmir, led zeppelin and the black crowes. >> she talks to angels, i know the words to that song. juan, you're going to bring us some hip and happening music. what do you have? >> i was thinking, look, we're taking a road trip. you have to have road trip music, right? >> yep. >> i picked songs that have to do with traveling. living in america, james brown. ignition, right? uptown funk, going from hollywood to harlem to jackson, mississippi. happy, which i think we should have happy feet. everyone is going to say how can you five live together in a bus for this long? we need some happiness and having a party. i'm just dying to dance with dana. >> wow! you're the only one. everyone wants to dance with kimberly. >> here, the reason i think james brown is, do you know what he sang about super highways
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coast to coast, easy to get anywhere. living in mencht i think that's perfect for a road trip. >> i like that one. kg, your top five? >> all the e-mails saying -- we'll include that one too. don't stop believin' is one of my favorite songs of all time, journey. love that. love to sing it. remember bowling, last time we went to the convention in tampa? we went and saw them. they were singing. it was amazing. there it is. where the streets have no name, u2. one of my favorite bands of all time. "why can't this be love," van halen. that's a strong move. "roar" by katy perry. and also "love don't cost a thing." sometimes it does. jennifer lopez. you know who you are. >> greg, you're going to wow us? >> in my contract, in my contract i state in any event where katy perry is played i don't have to attend. >> oh, perfect! >> so i am no longer on the bus.
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bye, everybody. all right, all right, all right. i have to take umbrage, of course, with eric. why must you pick songs you can hear on csi or in a department store or -- expand your horizons. >> do you know how good versions of kashmir led zeppelin are? >> stuff you don't hear on the radio because they deserve more exposure. pale green ghosts, by john grant. cause i'm a man, tame impala, probably the best band out right now. the new avalanches after 16 years, new avalanches album is out called wildflower. the song "noisy eater." >> hate noisy eater. >> will blow your mind. ty segall, get his album. and goat, psych dellic band from sweden does a great song called "talk to god" will blow your
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brains out. metropolit metaphorically. >> we'll be blowing our brains out. literally. >> here is what i think will happen. >> listen to different music. >> everybody is going to have their own headphones. >> i'm going to put on my beats and this is going to be blocked out of my awesomeness. >> i will teach you to learn to love "free and easy down the road i go." face book.com/the fivefnc. ming 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
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that increases the risk of death from asthma problems and may increase the risk of hospitalization in children and adolescents. breo is not for people whose asthma is well controlled on a long-term asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. once your asthma is well controlled, your doctor will decide if you can stop breo and prescribe a different asthma control medicine, like an inhaled corticosteroid. do not take breo more than prescribed. see your doctor if your asthma does not improve or gets worse. ask your doctor if 24-hour breo could be a missing piece for you. see if you're eligible for 12 months free at mybreo.com.
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it's time now for one more thing. miss dana? >> a little bit of a somber date. tony snow passed away eight years ago. >> i'm tony snow. welcome to fox news sunday. >> he was here on fox news channel, beloved. not just at fox but white house press secretary for george w. bush. he inherited me as his deputy and i took over for him when he left. i talked to jill snow today. the good news is all the children are doing great and thriving. we wish all of them very well and remember him on this day. >> we certainly miss him here at the fox news channel. fantastic human being. also on a positive note, talking about people and communities coming together to honor the fallen officers,
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coming out of this dallas story, very inspiring story about generosity and support of the men and women in blue. four young girls, oldest just being 12, decided to start a lemonade stand in the north dallas neighborhood. they sold drinks, cookies and brownies as a way to give back to the families of the fallen dallas police officers. you're not going to believe this. by the time the weekend was over, $10,000 they raised in just two days. they went out on monday to the dallas police association to drop off their check and i think it's really heartfelt and wonderful. and thank god the government didn't shut down their stand saying they didn't have a permit. >> right. >> uh-huh. let me go very quickly. you remember the makarena? this summer official rage sensation is pokemon. the new pokemon go app has people all over the world, including u.s. soldiers in iraq, running around up hills, through traffic, to try to catch them all, to get pokemon. nintendo stock has gone up. there's a downside.
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while you're catching pokemon, bad guys may be catching you like in st. louis where robbers lured unwitting gamers to a location. >> you know what they call pokemon in jamaica? >> i don't know, tell me. >> poke-man. >> really, really good joke. >> like one of your least offensive so it was good. latest piece on dallas is up on foxnews.com. backward, forward slash? i don't know anymore. opinion. you can look down there and look at t it's pretty long. very quickly, take a look at this book. i love this book. look what happened this week, first time debuted on "the new york times" best seller list. thank you to everyone. by the way, go to eric bolling.com, every book that's bought this week and maybe next week a signed copy of the book. >> and available on audio. >> did you read it? >> it's very hard. >> it's ten hours.
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>> i know! >> sacrifice. did you read yours? >> i read mine. >> i didn't but i will. that's it for us. "special report" is next. president obama tries to bridge the gap between his support of the black lives matter movement and his reaction to the murder of five dallas police officers by an african-american sniper. this is "special report." good evening. i'm shana breeman in for bret baier. last week's ambush killing of five police officers. at an interfaith service, president obama insisted blacks and minorities are treated differently by many police. fox team coverage. we look at the political
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