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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  January 6, 2017 5:00pm-6:01pm PST

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show that his sworn enemy of lying, pomposity, smugness, and groupthink. the great bill o'reilly up next. ♪ >> i'm in for bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us night. the mass shooting at fort lauderdale airport. authorities say 26-year-old esteban santiago and iraq war veteran, discharged by the national guard last summer open fired in the airport baggage claim area this afternoon.
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the accused shooter is in custody and being questioned by federal authorities and this evening, his brother. joining us now from washington, fox news national security correspondent jennifer griffin. all day long, we been hearing reports of this man's mental instability. >> eric, what i'm hearing from enforcement this evening, this private first class was on the alaska national army guard was the being investigated on multiple occasions by, not only the fbi, but also the criminal
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investigative division. it's not clear what the army was investigating him for before he was let go, he was discharged last year. in august 2016 for poor performance on an alaska. then we just learned that the fbi has confirmed that in fact, he did seek, come to them and their field office in anchorage, alaska, back in november and say that he believed that the intelligence agencies, u.s. intelligence agencies had gotten a hold of his brain and were trying to convince him to join isis by making him watch isis videos. they immediately took him to local authorities. they took him to a mental hospital for some psychological workup. at that point, sources here in washington tell me that the fbi opened and enter agency investigation. they did not find any connection to foreign terrorism, but right
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now, we do know that the fbi is going through this electronic devices to see if there's any connection to any foreign terrorist organizations. as of yet, there was never any evidence of that. the fbi did stick to his family in the past, they did take this seriously when they he came in back in november. so he the fbi office, does he at that point, get put on a no-fly list? >> that is really the question. now only a no-fly list, but why -- we're going to need and want to know a lot more details about how he got a weapon because again, he was separated from the national guard back in august of last year. they have been investigating him, an interagency investigation.
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they just didn't have enough evidence at that point in time to do anything more. it is a question, i think the kinds of issues that are going to be raised in the coming days certainly. >> tucker: it jennifer griffin, thank you very much. it joining us now and analysis. jim, will start with you. this thing just jumps out at me that he had visited the fbi field office in alaska saying "hey, someone's telling me to watch isis propaganda videos" wearing red flags going off all over the place? there was only two months ago. >> i don't know why we put up with the counterterrorism malfeasance at the obama administration has been doing for the past eight years. they've handcuffed law enforcement and to stop them from doing even the basic things they need it to to keep us safe. there's something i would like to point out. the picture that you guys have,
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he's wearing the kathia. he's also holding up the one finger salute that is the isis gang sign essentially those two things lead me to believe that he is already affiliated himself in some way, shape, or form to them. i think those need to be taken into account. whether he's crazy or not, isis told him that he can then committed an act. >> eric: fox can independently confirm the deaths. we think it is him. jim, talk to us a little bit. the law enforcement sent him for evaluation and they come back and they find out what? >> we don't know. that's just it. we don't know what their determination was and why they didn't put him as you mentioned on a no-fly list, on some sort of surveillance. why they didn't follow up and find out what his intentions
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were after he walks in and said "i'm being told to join isis" this guy essentially offered himself up and they turned him down again. speak them xp to in order to put a fire arm on an airplane coming out of military i.d. you have to say hold on, no firearms to the sky. >> my soul belief in terms of breakdown in the system, there's no question the sky was crazy. obviously he was unstable. i'm with jim. he could've had some type of aberration in his head where he felt he was getting images of ice is placed into his head and he had to go commit terrorist acts. one of the case may be, my contention is that the real failure here was when are we
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going to start looking at the airports as a total security package and not just the planes in the air? we can allow any areas in the airport to not be completely sterile because we only feel safe in the plane, again the goal of the terrorist is psychological. if we're not going to go through the airports because were worried about getting shot in the baggage claim, that's my concern. earlier i heard the former deputy of the security administration, safety administration, talking about how everything was great today. on fourth and was outstanding. the response was excellent. it was fast, it was on point. they took the sky without shooting him or killing him, fine. but security isn't about response. it's about prevention. could you imagine had this been an ak-47 assault rifle, fully automatic with a suicide vest on like we just signed turkey a year ago? >> i'm the one who asked that
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question. what about hardening the airport he said that's something we have to consider but there's a 450 airports. my question is, look what happened in turkey. the same thing happened when a terrorist walking to the terminal, for they had this gritty checkpoint, they just started mowing down people. is it time to look at what it's going to cost to lock down and hard and everything will airport in america? >> eric, and my the only one in this country who has been to the airport in tel aviv? security there is a psychologically-based. there's undercover operatives crawling through that airport. the 450 airports, the thousands of flights a day, undercover law enforcement officers with pocket police caps that fold up they can do the real security work. the yellow counter. the ll agents are the ones we
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need to take -- >> eric: if you do some of the things, jim, you're called a racist or you're called islamaphobic because your targeting and your profiling and the left believes that that's wrong. >> how many more people have to die before he face the indisputable fact that it is is radical islamists inspiring these people and we start targeting that? it's not all muslims, let's be clear. we need the help of muslims i don't agree with this to casey's guy before it happens. we need to go ahead and make that a priority, allow our law enforcement to do their job. >> eric: he wasn't muslim as far as i know. by the sound of his name, i guess i shouldn't generalize that, but it he didn't
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necessarily show up on a profil profile. >> the way he carried out the attack would have been prevented had you had just a couple of uniformed police officers in the baggage claim area. that would've been your deterrence layer. your second layer would've been your detection layer which is the undercover guy come again looking for those red flags. looking for some be running off to a bathroom. here's another thing, listen, i'm all for transporting our firearms. again, eric, i'm just trying to focus on individual nuggets to try to reduce this from happening again. i'm all for guns traveling all over the country. there are thousands a from law-abiding citizens who can transport a firearm legally. the fact is that if you're going to check that gun onto the plane, it might be time to get a little more -- cross screening those weapons and to make sure the intent is in there with anything else to travel. >> eric: next up on the rundown, more in the deadly shooting of fort lauderdale
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airport. his law enforcement prepared enough to deal with acts like this? that's up ahead. (vo) if you have type 2 diabetes, you may know what it's like to deal with high... and low blood sugar. januvia (sitagliptin) is a once-daily pill that, along with diet and exercise, helps lower blood sugar. januvia works when your blood sugar is high and works less when your blood sugar is low, because it works
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stuffy or runny nose, sore throat, and headache. for help lowering your blood sugar talk to your doctor about januvia. >> eric: continuing on with our top story. a shooting rampage at fort lauderdale international airport. it was pure chaos after the shooting began and they baggage claim area. passengers running from a terminal areas onto the tarmac and surrounding highway. about an hour later, a false report of another shooting, panic ensues. during joining us now from chice former superintendent of the police department in chicago. mr. mccarthy, let's begin with the pandemonium. there are a lot of law enforcement there, there were a lot of panic. whether they do right, what do
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you do wrong today? >> the first thing they did right was isolate, contain, identify the target, and taken into custody relatively quickly. without further incident, there is obviously a lot of damage that was done. i think there were some holes in the system. i've been to the airport in tel aviv, i was escorted by the israeli police and i still felt the security all over me all the time. although his being whisked through the security. we do have to look at airports outside of those checkpoints in the same vein. i can tell you here in chicago, to go things, first of all, i suspect that this young man walked into an fbi office and said that he was hearing voices, isis was affecting his brain and so on and so forth. it's entirely possible, and i believe that it's even likely.
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here's a man with some mental issues will eventually become subject to isis rhetoric. have a very powerful propaganda machine. i suspect he may have been watching some of those videos online. he has some mental issues and has passed, he is now being subjected subject to this propaganda, perhaps he acts on it. can't tell at this point. the fact is, the joint terrorism task forces are not going to run that investigation from a a-z. they're going to take it a, b, c and perhaps a man with mental issues and not as a terrorist. >> eric: a, b, c, this was in november. a guy walked into the fbi office months ago. it feels like someone dropped the ball, didn't follow him. should we be following guys like this? >> that's where i was going to go. it's probably not up to the jps
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to file this guy. i'm going to give credit to our former director of organized crime. they said it's not that serious, they're going to keep it. our intel division took it and rent out the rest of it. we are finding some gaps in there that perhaps we are closing and stopping some things from happening and that's the type of system that we need across the country. >> eric: very quickly, i only have about a minute or so, you mentioned making the airport security safe once you enter until you leave. that's a lot of money. >> it sure is. we have officers trained with heavy weapons. you will see s.w.a.t. officers at o'hare and midway on a regular basis when they're on patrol. sometimes it got a couple that we can assign there appear to some people feel good when that happens at the same time, it provides a separate level of
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safety that perhaps he you peoe don't see all the time. >> eric: mr. mccarthy, thank you very much. i'm next, a dampening intelligence report finding vladimir putin was behind last year's hacking attacks. kellyanne conway enters "talking points" enters its between seven all finished. umm... you wouldn't want your painter to quit part way. i think you missed a spot. so when it comes to pain relievers, why put up with just part of a day? aleve, live whole not part. painter: you want this color over the whole house?
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>> eric: and the impact to segment tonight, russian hacking in the u.s. election. today a long-awaited d classifying intelligent report was released. it blames russian president vladimir putin for heading the election. a short time ago, i spoke with kellyanne conway about the
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report and donald trump's classified briefing today on the subject. but first, we address today's events and fort lauderdale. okay kelly on, can we get your response to the fort lauderdale shooting earlier today. >> is a tragedy and the president-elect has been speaking to the governor of florida. he has been monitoring the situation and expressed his condolences and his support for those who lost loved ones and those who are injured certainly. it's a very sad day whenever this happens. >> eric: we can point out the president-elect could contact to the government minutes or an hour or so after the suspect was apprehended, meanwhile, remember back to the orlando shooting, the nightclub shooting governor scott complained to the following to that he had not yet heard from president obama. >> i do recall that slightly, and i do think it's important for the president of the united states, in this case will be donald trump soon, to be sure we are always in touch with the first responders, the elected officials in the given state and that is in fact with the president-elect did today and
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calling governor scott. we know that security is poorest at some of these common areas but that aside, i think we all just join together in moments like this. this is the time that the president-elect was about to have his security briefing, his intelligence briefing. he took the time to call governor scott and to make that connection to offer support and prayers. >> eric: let's talk a little bit about that briefing now. there's a classified document that became declassified earlier today. we went through and it looks like the heads of intel squarely put the blame on russia and they're saying that russia was attempting to influence our elections. >> we learned to go things today. one is that the dnc ignored the fbi's request to turn information over. they failed to have the property
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fence hacking defenses in place that would prevent this from happening. the russians also tried to hacked into the rnc but the rnc had a much better system in large part because the republican presidential nominee donald j. trump insisted that they do. that was impenetrable. we also see that the russian hacking, they were trying to hack, the question is did this influence the outcome of the elections? there is no clear evidence of that. >> eric: can i read, kellyanne, little bit of that? "why mayor pruden ordered an influence on the 2016 campaign. done a great secretary and harm electability and potential presidency and we have a high confidence in these judgments." it certainly sounds gets political to me.
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in my wrong? >> we feel that way as well. we certainly don't want intelligence to interfere with politics and we do want politics to and interfere with intelligence. when the president said earlier today to "the new york times" as it feels like a political witch hunt. the presence of the united states basically didn't say much about it. hillary clinton did mention it at a debate, but you did see the $1.2 billion the campaign spent going towards ads warning everybody that this was going to affect the outcome of the election. why? they felt that that she was going to end. it was only after she did not win that they got a appellant froth about this. there is no foreign government interfering in our nation paired that is very clear. at the same time, let's not draw and an axis where one does not exist between attempt and actual results. if anybody can tell me that
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hillary clinton lost for any other reason that she had, she was a terrible messenger, isolate know what her message was, please help me out. her message was i'm not donald trump. it was not enough. donald trump's message was i'm going to be a tougher chief. >> eric: will donald trump, president donald trump, make sweeping changes to the leadership? >> the one thing that donald trump said today as president-elect, i think it's very important in his statemen, eric, he will convene his own panel. in nine days, he will take action. he wants to talk to his own advisors about what makes sense moving forward. a lot of people are just looking back to the selection. i'm so struck by the number of people that talk about how the following things happen.
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russia hacked and hillary clinton lost. pretending to not make an axis when in fact, they are. it's been talked about on fox news how the dnc was hacked, the pentagon was hacked, the white house was hacked, wives are ready and this upward when 21 million records were hacked and our office and personnel management basically a government origin? conventional records of americans, what was the punishment then question our comedy operatives were expelled? who was up in arms? we are against any interference, but at the same time, people try to over politicize this in a way, you can't of them excited to talk about hate crimes against a disabled white boy in chicago, you can't get them excited to talk about the fact that minorities promise to distract every supreme court justice we put in front of them and slow walk our cabinet nominees.
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president obama had seven confirmed on inauguration day. president george w. bush had some confirmed as well. that should really get this country up in arms about interfering with democracy. let's be frank, you know who interfered with the election, the mainstream media by telling us all that hillary clinton was a shoe in. >> eric: you mentioned james crawford, take a listen to what he said yesterday. >> this is a multifaceted campaign, so the hacking was only one part of it. it also entailed classical propaganda, misinformation, fake news. >> eric: kellyanne, he blamed fake news on some of the attacks on the election. we're going to bring you back after the break, does president-elect donald trump, president trump have confidence
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in klapper? >> the president has faith in the community. he's also putting his faith in him. mr. clapper came out in october and said something. at the response from barack obama, he said "knock it off." boy, that's really going to scare somebody. none of that rings true. the other thing that he had made clear yesterday, he did not influence those votes. the senator from arkansas also made the point that donald trump has pronto old. certainly through explaining our defense budget, eric, they will put america in a stronger position that you can argue is against russia's, moscow's political entry.
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>> eric: i'd like to bring you back right after the break. >> okay, thank you. >> eric: i have more with kellyanne in a moment. including joe biden taking a shot at her boss. it don't go away. so, mr. harris, we have your fingerprints on the safe. a photo of you opening the safe. a post using the hashtag "#justrobbedthesafe" so, what are we supposed to think? switching to geico could save you a bunch of money
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>> eric: we continue now with our conversation with donald trump counselor kellyanne conway. a short time ago, we spoke about the escalating fight to repeal obamacare along with a shot over the bow of her boss from vice president joe biden. we're back with kellyanne conway. take a listen to joe biden. the entertaining guide to listen to what he hasn't something to say about donald trump. take a listen. >> oh donald, grow up. time to be an adult, your president. you've gotta do something. show us what you have. >> eric: all right, kellyanne, the reaction from the guy who has threatened to take donald trump out behind the school yard or something to that effect. >> it's really disappointing to
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hear the vice president speak that way, not surprising. he's been a number two guy and a country in and a democratic pa, they lost over 1,000 state legislative seats, they lost over a dozen government ships, they lost 68 house seats. they lost the election in 2010, 2014, 2016. large part because of the policy supports like the also unaffordable, and acceptable care act, obamacare. like all these bad trade deals and never benefited our american workers and donald trump who came in, without joe biden and barack obama, there may have never been president trump. i'd like to say to vice president, thanks for the nonadvice. we very much appreciate all the failed policies that allowed us to usher in a new era of
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hopefulness and buoyancy, fresh blood and excitement in this and administration. you're going to see president donald trump very quickly, eric, deliver and perform to the level he has always done his and his wildly successful business. it's a new tone, and content in washington. >> eric: one of the things that donald trump is promising to repeal and replace obamacare. president obama weighing in on his signature legislation. listen to this. it's pretty surprising. >> now is a the time and republicans i think have to go ahead and show their cards. if, in fact, they have a program that would genuinely work better, and they want to call it whatever they want, they can call it trump care, they can call it mcconnell care or ryan care. if it actually works, i will be the first one to say great.
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you should have told me that back in 2009. i asked. >> eric: okay. i think the republicans are trying to help in 2009. they were complete they shut out. they couldn't vote for obamacare. how is this? trumpcare? >> it's not very becoming, he's trying to be sarcastic. the main topic of conversation, repealing and replacing obamacare. having a very serious conversation about how to do that, knowing that millions of people rely upon it, knowing that pre-existing coverage is popular. but eric, we did try to help in 2009. we were nailed to the ground in 2010 because obamacare was the first major entitlement pass in this country without a single vote from one of the two political parties. a pass without a single republican vote, his party owns it and it will not be a great
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part of his legacy because you have millions of americans who are paying higher premiums, you've got people with fewer choice, lower quality, less access, and more frustration. the biggest lie and biggest piece of fake news i've heard in the last ten years, if you like your doctor you can keep your doctor. if you like your plan, you can keep your plan. donald trump and mike pence are going to allow you to buy your health insurance across state lines. they're going to allow you to have a health savings account where you control more of your spending, your health care spending, they're going to permit individual. they're going to block medicaid across the state. people are excited. look, the republicans won in 2010, '14, '16.
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>> eric: kelly, i only have about half a minute. can we get the democrats to play ball and work with trump? nancy pelosi said forget it, we are not working with him. >> chuck schumer represents new york and she represents san francisco. not exactly the rest of the country people are suffering under obamacare. i believe that the states where trump one in double digits, will play ball. they know what their constituents want. they're honest to they represen represent. not including two petty partisan politics. >> eric: coming up next, how should the incoming trump administration respond to russia after today's info report? will take a hard look at that right after this. constipated?
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tylenol and advil can quit after 6. so live your whole day, not part... with 12 hour aleve. >> eric: thanks for staying with us. i'm in for bill o'reilly. and the factor following segment tonight, president obama weighing in tonight. the president says it's clear the russians meddled and had words for anyone who doesn't. >> the degree to which we've seen a lot of commentary lately
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where the republicans or pendants or cable commentators who seem to have more confidence in vladimir putin then fellow americans because those fellow americans are democrats. that cannot be. >> does that include the president-elect? >> what i will say is that, i said this right after the election. we have to remind ourselves were on the same team. vladimir putin is not on our team. >> eric: joining us now from houston to analyze, with us in studio, former cia operations officer who worked in the former soviet union for two years. you're the right guy at the right time. i'm writing this report. i'm looking for the smoking gun. i can find a gun and it ain't smoking. >> if you read the report carefully, you'll find it. >> eric: i didn't read it carefully enough, that's what you're saying. i did, but go on.
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>> one thing they teach in law school is critical reading and i'm very glad i went to law school. when you read it critically and carefully -- when you have a theory, you have to test the theory and you have to prove the theory, i'm looking for the proof part of this theory. >> there is a difference there between intelligence and evidence. we're talking about an intelligence report. at the nsa, the fbi, and the cia came out this report. this is a declassified reversion of a much more detailed and classified version of your report that says three things. one, there is an organized effort by a high level officials including president delamere pollutant trying to influence our election. two, they took part in this hack. and three, where to make sure that going forward we have the necessary tools in place to
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prevent this from happening in our country. >> eric: scott, these are again theories and hypotheses without any evidence to prove it. >> right. i've seen the report and it certainly -- put it this way. most of the things i've seen in this report, these conditions existed at least ten years ago. this administration has never indicated an interest and russian operations against this country until it seems to have hurt the democratic party. now suddenly, they have become aware of the russian threat a day late and a dollar short at the 11th hour. >> eric: arash, was new in this report? there are a lot of countries doing this. we know at least four or five who are actively trying to do the exact same thing. >> scott and myself, you live and work to an soviet union, we worked in lithuania, where very
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familiar with russian efforts to try to undermine the fair and free elections in those countries except belarus because there is no fair and free elections and belarus. in ukraine and soviet countries, it is very intimately similar. if you remember, scott just said president obama had no interest in helping anti-russian forces in the u.s. around the world paired that is not true. look what we did in the ukraine. >> eric: unless you're down in the rabbit hole, go ahead scott, tell me what's new in this report. >> the thing that's new is for once, the russians have been trying to do this for many years and they have not been effective at it. the reason they were perhaps more effective at it if we are to believe this report is because hillary clinton provided them an ideal target. she compromised herself totally and it's this year that the russians worked to undermine her credibility. she undermine her own
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credibility and it was merely the russians that it was wielde wielded. the russians or the democrats are never claims that the russians manufacture this material. it's all genuine democratic emails. >> eric: arash, like you a lot. i like you a lot. >> that is very sad and not tru true. >> eric: i've gotta go. arash, scott, thank you very much. donald trump doubling down on his vow to make mexico reimburse the united states. i said it, reimburse united states for a new border wall and mexico's former president is doubling down on his refusal to do it. we'll be right back with that. go, go!
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>> in the end result of this final segment tonight, who will pay for a new border wall with mexico? president-elect donald trump is planning to have congress pay for its destruction. she is going to make mexico reimburse united states and is that something he's said before? >> i said mexico is paying for the wall. with the full understanding that the country of mexico will be reimbursing the united states for the full cost of such a war. okay? >> well, vicente fox, one of donald trump's fiercest critics said today... he used the whole word in the tweet. joining us now to analyze, here in studio, democratic
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strategists. first, he is not going to pay for that wall. >> this is something that president-elect trump has been saying from the beginning. the wall being built was never contingent upon the mexican government making a one-time payment, eric. back in march 2016, the campaign released a two page document showing you exactly how mexico would be paying for the wall. of course there given the option to make a payment. but then donald trump outlined several ways that mexico will pay for it. whether it is provisions in the patriot act, going into mexico to increasing visa fees. tariffs. there is a number of ways that a president administration under trumpet trump would be able to recruit that money. >> i told you he was going to backtrack on the wall. this is something he said, that sound bite was from october
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october 22nd. prior to the election. nothing is inconsistent. >> there are always inconsistencies in trump world, i get it. but what also hasn't been consistent years at the american public doesn't want this wall. 58% are against it, 59% don't think mexico will be paying for that on top of it. over 70% of republicans are against this. >> do you think voters want the wall? >> it's the foundation to donald trump's immigration policy. it's about drug trafficking, trafficking, and donald trump won. i think this is something many americans want but i do also believe that the dishonest media on the left have really been putting out misinformation about this wall to begin with.
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that's going to be up to the trump administration to get out there and say why this is so important. it's important that donald trump maintain his twitter account to continue -- >> but, donald trump uncensored it's a hugely entertaining thing. i don't follow him on twitter though. i just told her that 50% of americans don't want the border wall. when you say many americans, these are trump diehards. these are people who also want a muslim band. these are not going to happen and donald trump presidency. >> are you saying there is not going to be a wall? >> i am saying there is not going to be a while. >> the door is going to be beautiful. >> they canted at the dnc, lock her up. this isn't just diehard trump
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supporters. at the end of the day, 70% of americans did not want obamacare and guess what? we have it. >> when we return, the latest developments on today's mass shooting in fort lauderdale, we will be right back. often leads here. today there's drug-free aleve direct therapy. a high intensity tens device that uses technology once only in doctors' offices. for deep penetrating relief at the source. aleve direct therapy. you may sometimes suffer from a dry mouth. that's why there's biotene. and biotene also comes in a handy spray. so you can moisturize your mouth anytime, anywhere. biotene, for people who suffer from dry mouth symptoms.
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tomorrow's the day besides video games. every day is a gift. especially for people with heart failure. but today there's entresto... a breakthrough medicine that can help make more tomorrows possible. tomorrow, i want to see teddy bait his first hook. in the largest heart failure study ever, entresto was proven to help more people stay alive and out of the hospital than a leading heart failure medicine. women who are pregnant must not take entresto. it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren. if you've had angioedema while taking an ace or arb medicine,
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don't take entresto. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high potassium in your blood. tomorrow, i'm gonna step out with my favorite girl. ask your doctor about entresto. and help make the gift of tomorrow possible. >> you are looking live at a picture of the fort lauderdale international airport, when we are waiting for an update from the fda fbi, it left five people dead and eight people injured. now being allowed to leave the airport. and those without cars are being bused to another location where they can get a ride. joining us now to analyze from boise, idaho, former cia -- wek about this at the beginning of the show. i think a lot of people are
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seeing this and thinking, man, seeing those people on that tarmac today, i pray i am never in that situation. how do we avoid that going forward? >> there are a couple parts of it. how does the government react, what is the dh's s said, this is a long debate. but we talk about, the security perimeter objectively lie in a airport or transport facility? you'd are just pushing out the problem. >> are you, though? when you are in the building, you are in an enclosed space. these airports are big here. once you get out that door, it can dissipate and become a far softer target, right? >> well, not really. all you are doing is pushing that gathering out further because you've still got to get through security. this is something, i guess we're not saying it, it is not a new issue. they've been agonizing over this
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for some time. the other part is as you pointed out can he do? as an individual. you are walking around, the unfortunate reality is we are never going to reduce these sort of incidents down to zero. so what can you do? you can't always be in a high state of alert? it is not going to happen, even when you are a professional at this sort of thing. when you are in a situation when you're standing in a crowd, public event, transportation facility, whatever it may be that's when you raise your alert. >> let me raise an example. before you are in the stadium, your seats, they are going through your bags, metal detector. you are not even near the playing field. in the airport, you can walk through the terminal. sometimes you can go shopping before you're even checked through security. >> any time you're in that general -- i don't mean when you're standing there with a bunch people. when you go into a large crowd
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of facility, a shopping mall, whatever. this is not rocket science but you just have to be more aware of your surroundings. you're never going to be way up here all the time. pick and choose. choose to be more aware, your options unfortunately, are unsatisfying but if something starts to touch off, you got to get away. you got a fight. if that's not an option. the shock of something like this. >> profiling, is it time to reopen that debate? >> i think we should always be looking at profiling. in a professional manner. and people lose their minds sometime, the reality is, you know what? a gun in the proper manner, it works. when we are talking about this. this is not necessarily a terrorism related shooting. >> i've got to go, buddy. thanks for watching.
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in for bill o'reilly tonight, who will be back on monday. please remember, the spin stops right here. as we are looking out for you. >> megyn: breaking tonight, we are waiting for an fbi news conference on the shooting that unfolded it and one u.s. this afternoon. travelers were confronted by a deranged gunman with military training. welcome to "the kelly file," everyone, i am megyn kelly. it lasted for hours today after a 26 year old suspect who we are not naming for our "the kelly file" policy started methodically shooting passengers in the baggage claim area of the airport. but despite the suspect being quickly arrested, millions of americans were watching in horror as my colleague shepard smith was interviewing one man on the scene and it reports of a second shooting started to break.