tv The O Reilly Factor FOX News January 16, 2017 5:00pm-6:01pm PST
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to last year's language, and next year's words await another voice." we want to be her voice. tell me what you think at facebook.com/martha maccallum. we will see you back here tomorrow night. good night, everybody. thanks for being with us on our maiden voyage. >> bill: "the o'reilly factor" is on tonight. >> it is going to be very difficult. unless this >> bill: was that t help both to the country or is it creating more hatred? tonight, "the factor" will look at america divided as the inauguration closes in. >> you said, you drew the redline. >> look -- >> i don't want to make too big a deal out of it. >> bill: president obama still not real comfortable answering questions about syria, poison gas, and why he didn't do anything about it. charles krauthammer has some thoughts.
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>> we owe bill o'reilly and "the o'reilly factor" a great thank you for the appearance on his show. >> bill: also, had come a terrific story, the tyler talladega college marching band will perform at the inauguration thanks to "the factor" viewers. >> so thankful, so excited for our students. to >> bill: caution, you are about to enter the "no spin zone." factor begins right now. ♪ >> bill: hi, i am bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. "the factor" viewers come through again. that is a subject of this evening's talking points memo. as you may know, some vicious, hateful people are trying to sabotage the presidential inauguration set for this coming friday. there is no excuse for that. peaceful transition of power should be respected by all loyal americans. in fact, the term, loyal opposition, is a badge of honor. we need it differing opinions driving vibrant society.
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when you take the word "loyal" out, then, it is simply a position, that is a subversion of the republic. enter the talladega college marching band, 230 strong. the tornadoes are a fabulous part of a very important alabama college. talladega was founded by ex-slaves and some excellent african-american school, it creates opportunities for students, who may not have many resources. the talladega tornadoes were invited to perform at the inauguration. 99% of the band have never been to washington, d.c. kids were thrilled. then, came the threats. directive of the college president, dr. billy hawkins. he spoke to "the factor" on thursday. >> they have said that i have shamed the college by making this decision and i have had folks that say that i am a disgrace to my african-american race and it has been pretty
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nasty. >> bill: now, immediately after that interview, donated money from "the factor" viewers ported to gofundme.com to help the talladega band. as it stands right now, the college has received -- ready -- close to a half million dollars for the band and for scholarships. that is simply amazing. >> we owe bill o'reilly at "the o'reilly factor" a great thank you for the appearance on the show. we are just so happy that they'll have the opportunity, as american citizens, to have the opportunity to march on pennsylvania avenue, to be a part of the civic ceremony. i am just excited for the students. the culture that we get to -- the more excited i become. >> bill: great story. again, "the factor" viewers have donated so much money to help talladega, not only will the vendor to go to the inauguration, it will have its entire infrastructure updated and scholarships will be provided to help poor students. my foundation donating $25,000. the bigger picture is this.
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much of that money donated was given by trump supporters, the deplorable's that have been demonized as racists by some on the hateful far left. the story is vivid proof that generalizing, generalizing about any group of people and is foolish and dishonest. dr. hawkins knew what he was doing when he came on "the factor." he could have gone on any program, but he chose us, because he knows this audience, you guys, are watching because you want fairness and justice. almost martin luther king jr. federal holiday, the talladega college marching band ready to perform at the inauguration. the students will never forget that honor. the country should be grateful to have these kids in d.c. and for "the factor" audience has made it all possible. that is the memo. top for the top story reaction, joining us from washington, charles krauthammer. this is a repudiation, i believe, of the race baiters, and it is a vivid repudiation of
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them. do you disagree? >> no, i think you're absolutely right. i think you have done a really good deed. i think the college president has shown infinitely more spine than all of the ivy league presidents have collectively to the pressures they are under, political correctness. and, as you say, this is a celebration of -- this isn't a celebration of donald trump. this is a celebration of a solid transition through the central focal point of civic life. and these kids, who probably are not politically committed the way the people who try to pressure the school are, simply want to be able to say, and they will say, that their grandchildren, that i marched in and an end inaugural parade. it doesn't matter which one. to deny them that, the way i think you are correct in saying, the haters have done, is a big deal. and i am glad it is not going to happen. now, last week, the fact that
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singers and actors had been pressured not to show up to the inauguration. i could not get terribly excited over that. but i can understand how the people who watch your show were terribly excited about denying these kids, for whom, as you say, 99% of never even been to washington. this is going to be the memory of their lives. >> bill: but this is all about, the reason that i was so happy, and we didn't solicit donations, by the way, you know, we didn't make it a focal point of the interview with dr. hawkins. we said at the end, and ten seconds, the band need some money, gofundme.com has got this thing. omarosa manigault was on and she said it, not me. it was just a quick bang. then, boom. but what i was so happy, i was happy that the doctor chose us, and he did choose us. and that shows these haters on
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the far left that what you are trying to put out there, that the fox news channel and "the o'reilly factor" are a bunch of racists and they do it every day, you know they do it, charles. just vicious stuff. this is so untrue. and the second thing, you hit it right on the head. this college president, he has taken every kind of heat you can take, vial threats, some want him removed from his position and the college, trying to get m removed. this man said, you know it is best, that the students have this experience. you want to come after me? come on. i am not going to deny the students. that is courage. that is what martin luther king day should all be about. go. >> that is what higher education should be about. one of the great tragedies is the collapse, the cowardice, of the leaders who are leading universities, caving in on these demands, caving into political
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correctness, punishing professors and others who speak up in a way that isn't exactly the way it is supposed to be, according to their liberal -- and here we have, a man who has had a college, many people haven't heard of, stands up, as you say, to more devastating threats, and i think he is righ right. i also admire the fundraising capacity. i would like to put in addition on my house, maybe you can help me out with that. >> bill: [laughs] a few maple might kick you 30 or $0.40. $0.40. nobody's feeling sorry for you, come on, now. it is just such a good story, this story, that is why i lead with her tonight, and the face of bad stories. the rest of our program, we are going to have to deal with the heat created and all of the crazy stuff that is going on. this is such a good story, a positive story for the country. >> it is also in contrast to the
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politicians, who are now going to boycott the inauguration. >> bill: the 31 democrats. speak with us not what you want to do. you want to boycott? book on the state of the union address. take a political event and stay out. that is fine. but the inauguration is beyond party. it's a celebration of something, the most glorious moment of civic behavior and our culture. >> bill: you are absolutely right. >> what you got to do, if you want to personally stay home because he really can't stand the guy, fine. but all of these people are making ostentatious show boats announcements that they can't tolerate this. that is how you stay home --dash -- >> bill: dana perino has a very interesting take on what is happening and she is coming up after you. we have security so charles krauthammer can't leave this chair, to talk about president obama being confronted about syria. >> redline.
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♪ >> bill: mpeg segment tonight, last night on "60 minutes," president obama talks, as usualn control, except when it came to syria. you may remember that in 2012, about a year before the cruel tyrant a saudi used poison gas on civilians, mr. obama threaten him. >> redline. you have to say that created and there have been reports that it wasn't in your speech. >> no, it wasn't. >> that you just sort of ad-libbed it. >> look. if you are putting all the weight on that particular phras phrase, then, in terms of how it
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was interpreted in washington, i think you make a legitimate point. i have got to tell you, though, i don't regret at all saying that if i saw assad using chemical weapons on his people, that that would change my assessments in terms of what we were or were not willing to do in terms of syria. >> but you didn't say that. you said, you drew the redline. >> look. >> i don't want to make too big a deal out of this. >> bill: once again, charles krauthammer joins us from washington. the president had trouble with that question. the most important part of all of this is what happened after mr. obama didn't do anything to assad, correct? >> it is not just what happened in syria. where the russians came in and appeared to pull chestnuts out of a fire, this phony deal, where supposedly chemical weapons were all evacuated, they weren't. chemical weapons were used later in the war. obama did nothing.
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it's not even just syria. when obama says it was missing, it was interpreted in washington, no, it was interpreted in beijing, and moscow, and tehran, by allies all over the world, with the united states president says the word "redline," that has a meaning. obama says it is a phrase, as if it was some kind of random phrase. it has a meaning and diplomacy. you cross, we act. they cross, he didn't act. as a result, you see all the aggressive actions around the world. people understood that this is fundamentally a week and feckless president who will not resist, hence, the south china sea. hence, ukraine. hence, crime the area. -- crimea. hence iran's essentially taking over syria and lebanon, as well. >> bill: the worst barked on my part for me is, i said this at the time, this isn't monday morning quarterback and,
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as soon as assad drop that gas killing their babies and the children and all of that, the next day, the u.s. air force should have just bombed his air force to smithereens. that is easy to do, as you know, they only have one big air base. we could have taken it out in an hour. okay? that was it. we don't do ground troops, we don't need a big war occupation. bang. you don't put another plane up there. but since the united states anything, russia, as you rightly said, came in, and ron kaman, and the slaughter began. and what did the slaughter lead to? millions of migrants leaving the area, flooding the zone in europe. terrorism on the march. isis rising in power because of the chaos. all of these things came from president obama's failure to do anything. but i don't think the president would ever admit that. >> no, i don't think he has admitted that to himself at all. i mean, you look at the victory tour he has been at for the
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last, i don't know, two weeks or so, celebrating all of the great things his presidency has accomplished. his presidency is going to be remembered as a historical parenthesis. he is not willing to admit that, i kind of understand, he spent eight years of his life as president of the united states,o admit that your achievements are written on sand, but you look at obamacare, that is written on sand. he never got the buy-in from the oppositional from the country. he never got cap and trade. he had to go through executive orders. they are all going to be canceled, theare going to be ca. he tried immigration was done microform, did not succeed. this was a failed presidency. i think the reason is the overreach. he also sort of overestimated himself. his supreme self-confidence that you see even to this day and that a "60 minutes" interview the other night, is what i think
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was the downfall. he thought, i know more about this than anybody else, i am smarter, i understand the middle east, and if i just say the words, "redline" and i go back on it, people are still going to respect me. and this belief that he has and what he calls the international community, which is a fiction, international norms, a fiction, he adhered to that. i mean, the model is, what is it, the moral arc of the universe tends towards justice. something he got from martin luther king. the problem is that doesn't apply to the so-called community of nations. >> bill: no, it absolutely doesn't. there is a lesson here for donald trump. a big, big lesson. the president-elect has a tendency to speak off-the-cuff, as obama did on the redline thing, and to say, whatever he wants to say on his mind. but if you say it as president, you better back it up, correct?
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>> that is where i think we are going into very, very stormy waters with obama. -- with donald trump. obama understood what he was doing. he meant what he said. then, he backed off. with term, he said so many things, many of them outrageous, just look at the interview he did today with the german and the british newspaper, talking about nato in authentic ways, talking about the eu, talking about obsolescence. word he says has an impact. the problem is, he does so many of these things that are outrageous, never heard before, i think they cancel each other out. >> bill: so do i. but i am talking about big things. he is going to be tested and he is going to be tested quick, donald trump. >> let me give you, talking about a big thing, taiwan. you don't screw around with the chinese in taiwan. >> bill: loved china. >> they have said the carrier,
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the chinese are saying that the carrier, the taiwan strait, if you are looking for one area where this could be his redline, he may be challenged, you should start worrying about that now. >> bill: the chinese are bored economically. they are going to see how far they can push them. charles krauthammer, everybody. directly ahead, are some democrats on the verge of subverting the american system? dana perino will deal with that. later, "watters' world," the race addition. blacks and bikes talking about each other. up ahead. -- drug-free aleve direct therapy. a tens device with high intensity power that uses technology once only available in doctors' offices. its wireless remote lets you control the intensity, and helps you get back to things like this... this... or this. and back to being yourself. aleve direct therapy. find yours in the pain relief aisle.
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people. it is going to be hard, it is going to be very difficult. i don't see this president-elect as a legitimate president. >> you do not consider him a legitimate president? why is that? >> i think the russians participated in helping this man get elected. >> bill: now, is that helpful? is it? no, it is not. we respect congressman lewis but he is divided the country. by the way, he did that in 2001, as well. he didn't attend george w. bush's inauguration. instead, mr. bush wasn't at a legitimate president because of the recount. dana perino, host of "the five." 31 democrats including mr. lewis are going to do boycott the inauguration. good. i don't care about those people. there they are. all radical left is. you had an interesting observation about why they are doing it. >> if you look at all of these democrats, they are almost and very safe seats.
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they paid no political price for not going to the inauguration. in fact, they will probably get very good public public relations and hits on their web sites and social media and their districts by their constituents praising them for taking this tough stand of not going to the inauguration. they pay no price. >> bill: one of them is congressman lacy clay, the guy who put up the drawing about the police as the peg. another one, maxine waters, she didn't go to ws inauguration, either. these people are in congress because their districts are, for whatever reason, crazy left. there are some crazy right districts, too. >> absolutely. i also think -- 31 is not that big, there are progressive democrats that will attend the inauguration out of a sense of duty. a lot of times, think about a republican to go to president obama state of the union. they are not standing there because they are going to cheerr the message but they go because democracy is a participatory
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sports. >> bill: the guy wilson yelled out "liar," that time. that was terrible and he heard his own cause for that. >> he paid a price. he >> bill: he did. right now, we are celebrating, as charles and i just discussed, the peaceful transition of power, ever since george washington, one of the things that washington was most adamant about, and these people can participate in a peaceful transition of power? we can't do it? that, to me, is insulting. >> the two most prominent, may be most popular democrats, are actually going to be there and on stage with donald trump where they will be sitting there witnessing. president obama and hillary clinton. they are both going to be there. so, do you think they really want to go? probably not. especially hillary. >> bill: i think bill clinton wants to go. >> jimmy carter was the first to say "i'll be there." >> bill: is he going to be there? i heard his health -- >> georgia hw bush is not. >> bill: the presidents will be there because this is the
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tradition of the presidency. >> one of my favorite things in january of 2009, george w. bush invited all the former living presidents to the white house to meet president-elect obama. they had a luncheon and they all stood in front of the resolute desk. it is one of my favorite pictures. i thought, it is just amazing how he showed the world over and over again what kind of country we are. >> bill: we want robust, loyal opposition. were you there in that meeting? >> i got to go in for the photo op. i saw the report is going on and i with robert gibbs in the press secretary's office going through transition stuff, and i said, we could go to this meeting. so, we tucked in behind and stood by the grandfather clock. it really is one of my favorite moments. >> bill: where they all talking to one another? >> yeah, they all had the luncheon they were standing there for the photo op. >> bill: for they joshing each other? >> a little bit. you think about all the things that carter said about all of them, the things that bill clinton said about george h.w. bush, the things that obama said about 43, all of those things had gone away by
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that moment. >> bill: and clinton and bush the elder became good friends. >> they are all pretty good friends, actually. >> bill: they all get along. >> i hope it continues. >> bill: that was a high point. the only one who boycotted was, and this is when w took over, after the dispute and the supreme court, lewis, same guy, doing it now, maxine waters, and a guy named donald payne, who is no longer in office. so, anyway, thank you for the inside. we appreciate it. there is plenty more had to, as "the factor" moves along this evening. donald trump seems to be making twitter's his chief policy microphone. is that a wise thing to do? and political hatred, is it at an all-time high? brit hume will address that. stay tuned for those reports as "the factor" continues all across the usa and all around the world. panding our fiber network coast to coast. these are the places we call home.
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personal account will triple, probably to 60 million. so, as it is a legitimate way to get his message out, is it not? >> it is very smart because twitter is trumps weapon of choice because every political reporters are not in all the breaking news is there first. in the media treats every tweet by donald trump like breaking political news. it gets out everywhere. they reported verbatim. the problem is, they don't verify or check anything he puts out there first. so, for donald trump -- >> bill: what does it mean? he puts it out, what do they have to verify? he saying it, what do they have to verify? >> there are certain things he says in certain tweets, for example, this past weekend about john lewis, not at all accurate. >> bill: >> bill: the atlanta journal-constitution did it. they checked it. they did it. >> doesn't happen in real time, bill. >> bill: it can't. >> it has all gone -- that is why trump loves it so much. he can get an unfettered message
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out there without any constraint to multiple millions of followers -- people, rather -- on every platform. >> bill: i can't argue with that. but he is president now, cheryl. they're supposed to be a certain decorum and how a president communicates to the world. i think trump will smash that. >> there has to be decorum. this is donald trump. this is what got him elected. this is what won him ohio and michigan and donald trump is not going to change. >> bill: the tweets one market? >> of corseted. he went direct to his audience. we know that the mainstream media tend to be liberal. he will go completely around them and go straight to the american people. on twitter, i'm sorry, you got 57 million active americans on twitter, more than 300 million active users on twitter globally, why not bypass the media? that is exactly what he is doing. >> bill: we all understand that. here is an interesting fact, mary anne. 79% of the american people don't go to twitter.
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they are not tweeting. 79%. he is reaching, as you pointed out, he is reaching the press and he is reaching people who are politically interested, but he is not reaching the masses. they are still dependent on programs like this. go ahead. >> but then, programs like this and others put the tweet up, just as if they were looking at a screen of the iphone. >> bill: i very rarely do. >> you have tried to talk to him about this. that is the good news for term. the bad news for trumpets, i think the reason he has a 55% on favorability ralph rating right now is because of his tweeting. he has used it to pick fights and fully presents as an individual and settle scores. that is not for people -- he has done it more than ever since the election. >> bill: meta-speculation. >> but it's working. that's the point. he is not going to stop it. >> bill: you say it works but there is a gallup poll out, all right, it just came out, it says 55% of americans don't like the way trump is transitioning into the white house.
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you say it works? >> don't like it when it translate to jobs and tax cuts and investments. you have ceos that are afraid of donald trump on twitter. they should be! he has got the ultimate mouthpiece, using his twitter account. >> bill: do you think, mary anne, it's an inhibitor for people? are they afraid they're going to get a tag for the president of united states on twitter and their guards to deal with that fallout? do you think he is using it as an intimidation? >> absolutely. look at what it has done to certain stock prices for certain companies. it has tried to silence his opponents. there is no product on my question, it has a chilling effect in a way that is troubling, frankly. >> bill: why? doesn't he have a right to do that? speak and you think taking the stock market is a good thinker , bill? >> bill: if he says, mary anne, that he will negotiate with the drug companies that do business with the federal agencies, look, that is a good thing. everybody should know that because the drug companies may be forced to bring prices down.
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i don't care if the drug stocks tank, it doesn't matter to me. >> it is very mixed. a very mixed. bill, and has a chilling effect on individuals who don't have the standing that trump does. this is going to be the president of the united states going after individual, institutions, and businesses. he >> bill: all right, but they are going after him big tie on the media. last word. >> if you are the ceo of boeing or ford, or the producer of "saturday night live." be worried, donald trump is not going to stop. >> bill: i wouldn't be worried. do what you think is right and debated. ladies, thank you. when we come back, political hatred. is it at a dangerous high in america right now? and watters talking to the folks about better race relations. >> how are you doing? >> pretty good. >> i am here to heal the racial divide. >> good luck. >> i'm going to need it. >> bill: he is. those reports after these messages.
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i am totally blind. i lost my sight in afghanistan. if you're totally blind, you may also be struggling with non-24. calling 844-844-2424. or visit my24info.com. >> announcer: "the o'reilly factor," the number one cable news show for 16 years and counting. >> bill: thanks for staying with us, i am bill o'reilly. political hatred, no doubt. this is a divided country. some americans are actually trying to sabotage this week's presidential inauguration, as we discussed. demonstrators are pouring into
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washington, which is all right, unless they become disruptive and nasty. joining us now from florida. brit hume. do you think political hatred is at its highest level ever? >> well, i can't go back to the 18th century, but i can say that in my time covering washington, which goes back close to 50 years, i have never seen the pre-inauguration atmosphere in terms of the poison equaling what we see here. this is usually a time when the partisan bitterness and disappointments of an election are set aside, if only temporarily, nonetheless, set aside, because of this remarkable event, which is the peaceful transition of power that you and charles were talking about earlier, which is something that is common to lasting democracies and uncommon almost everywhere in the world. so, it is very much something to celebrate. people such the partisanship and the disappointment, the bitterness come aside. this year, it is not happening. at least, not to the degree it
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used to. >> bill: all right. when nixon was elected in the middle of the vietnam war, it was crazy in america. with the demonstrations, the hatred about vietnam, and all of that, do you think it is worse now than it was back then? >> in terms of the political partisans, it is worse. if you are talking about the atmosphere and the people up en the body politic, you would have to make a serious comparison. just in terms of the political world, i think the partisanship and bitterness is the worst i have ever seen. >> bill: what about the bush-gore supreme court election? now, that was so divisive, and i was -- my question is, why is the hatred of a higher level now than back then? when i bought of democrats thought the election was stolen from them? >> i think the antipathy towards donald trump, the man, is more
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intense than it was against george w. bush. even though the antipathy toward him was pretty strong at it became stronger with time, because of the tensions over the iraq war, but in terms of the personal antipathy, i think trump, the people who don't like trump feel about him in a way that they didn't ever feel about george w. bush. they feel that this man is -- >> bill: do you know why that is? >> well, i think i have a sense of it. that is that trump -- first of all, trump is different from another politician. in the sense, by and large, he does not try to smooth the edges and accommodate in in a way tht politicians do. politicians generally go out of their way, while they may stick to their convictions, they go out of their way to smooth their edges so that they are as acceptable as possible to as many people as possible. trump is highly acceptable and has a warm devotion of his supporters, of his hard-core supporters, who are not small in number. but for the rest of the people,
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trump says whatever he wants, he uses his twitter account in whatever way he feels like, and he is brash and he is a braggart and he doesn't dress and look the way they think a president should and they are offended by him on a multitude of levels. he makes that possible and enables her to some extent. but i think that people who feel that way about him are really missing something. it turns out to be more to donald trump than i thought, i think more than a lot of people thought, i think you are seeing it unfold before your very eyes. a lot of the people who want have anything to do with him are missing it. that is it, bill. if you go back to about three weeks before the election, going forward to today, donald trump has done a lot of things right. he campaigned effectively and without mistakes in the closing weeks of the campaign. he overtook hillary clinton and won the election. since then, you look at his cabinet choices, this is an extraordinary group of people, many of them highly qualified,
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many of them very interesting. i think that he has not insisted that they agree with him on everything. indeed, he said the other day when he was asked about the things about matus and teller's and, they didn't comport with the remarks he made about russia, he said, he didn't have to do that. he told them to be there selves. i didn't expect that from him. i thought he wouldn't regard every disagreement as a subject of a nasty tweet for that hasn't happened. i think people need to take another look at this. that doesn't mean -- he may be a failed president. >> bill: give him a chance. >> exactly. >> bill: that is what fairness in a republic is. >> give him a chance. >> bill: brit hume, everybody. watters on deck on this martin luther king federal holiday. he talks to both blacks and whites about race relations. watters is next. ♪ runs on intel?
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>> bill: back of of the book segment tonight, "watters' world." we hope you have enjoyed the martin luther king federal holiday. as we were we reported last week i might as a day that should bring americans together. we send watters out to talk about black and white americans about how race relations can improve. ♪ >> happy martin luther king day. >> seemed to go. >> are you going to do anything specific to celebrate? >> i was actually thinking how i can commemorate with my kids, just to really drive it home for them. >> very nice. >> that his is legacy still lis with us. >> what you think the government needs to do to improve race relations? >> black people need to come together. that's the first thing. >> i don't know that the
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government can do much. race relations are sour because of the attitudes of individuals and institutions of power. >> stop profiling. >> i think it is education, not just in terms of going to the classrooms, and the way that we inform ourselves, think about the history, how we have gotten this far. >> you think that the government can do anything to improve race relations here in america? >> no. it's just an evolution. it just takes time. >> you think things are getting better? >> i do. >> is there anything you would like the government to do for you? >> make sure they don't get rid of obamacare. >> i think it is a matter of taking initiative to improve themselves and not just expecting it to come to them, either. >> bill: is there something he would like white people to know about black people? >> simply that we are not to be feared. >> everybody is the same. >> we are all brothers and sisters. i care about everybody, whether you're black, white, asian, latina, doesn't matter. >> is there anything you want white people to know about you? >> you're not white, we are just people. we are not black and we're just people. >> do you think white people are
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obsessed with race? >> they get obsessed with skin pigmentation. >> i just wish that everyone i realize we are all here together. there there is something called reverse discrimination. i didn't know what that was. >> do you think black people mess under stand things about you sometimes? >> yes. >> like what? >> that we all have struggles and we all are probably a lot more in common than it appears. >> do you think white people must understand black why peope sometimes? >> i think -- i don't think we should generalize it in terms of white people. i think it should just be about people. >> do you know who i am? >> i do not. >> i am watters and this is my world. >> nice. >> bill: he looked impressed. was it hard to get people to talk about that? >> it was harder to get right people to talk. the black people were easy. a lot of white guys just ran away. i didn't want to touch it. especially in martin luther king day. >> bill: national television. the reviews are in from the spin stops here shows in tulsa and reading, pennsylvania, you did well. they like to you. >> how would you know?
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you skipped out and watched football with miller every time i was on stage! >> bill: you were on the other monitor. >> every time i came on, there was football on the green room. >> it is football or watters, you know what we are going to do. we were keeping an eye on you. the folks kind of like you and you were nervous. >> i wasn't nervous at all. i was expecting you to be a little more high maintenance. all you ate was peanuts and pretzels. i thought we were going to get steak and lobster. there was nothing. >> bill: is a leading tour. >> and you don't shake hands, either. you fist bump. >> we have a meet and greet, 400 people every night. i need to keep a type. >> protect the hands. >> bill: you can do whatever you want. i have to work, i have to write. all right, watters, good job tonight at over the weekend. "the factor" tip tonight, some changes we are making on this program. "the tip" moments away. ♪ symptom relief you need
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>> bill: back to the tip of the day. we are making some changes here in a moment. premium members getting 20% off everything on billoreilly.com. including books. lacey washington, the answer is, they are bigots. the very thing they accuse trump supporters of being. for you, brenda. not everyone is in your circumstance. millions are getting free health insurance. that's why the costs are rising for the payers.
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government assistance is decided on income. it's a numbers scam. as for deserving, i think the folks working hard and low paying jobs are that. oh, come on. those polls are clearly entertainment. you don't use them to use political points. they are a reflection of what our audience thinks any given night. it's not used on "the factor" because the results are not random. they are not scientific. they are targeted to people who use certain sites. come on. well, thank you for the compliment. when the time is right, we will do that.
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i've read plenty of books about world war ii, but none that havd the detail you provide. my co-author is the research provider, jim. on this storyteller. i am glad you liked the book. yes, the plane for the atom bomb was dropped on hiroshima, sits in the space museum in virginia. that's where it is. yeah, people don't know i do that. i do a mean james carmel. we had a blast doing that this weekend. finally, tonight the "tip of the day," after 20 years on the air, our readings are still dominant on cable tv news. that's because of you guys.
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we are making a few changes to keep it fresh. the biggest one is we are not going to use any fanatical ideologues anymore. we cut down on that last year, and it worked. it used to be, i would go after folks that did not have rational arguments. i would kind of pound them into putting and they were just spouting ideological nonsense. that happens about the left and the right. now i'm i'm bored with that. i am bored with it. i don't want to talk to people who are zombie fied and i don't want to hear it. so you won't see them here. the left right talking points, guests will not be invited back. we told all of our contributors, they must think about the subject in a fair and based way. "tip of the day." that's it for us tonight. we would like you to spout out at "the factor" from anywhere in the world. word of the day, do not be open
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augment. thanks for watching us tonight, i am bill o'reilly. please remember, the spin stops here. we are definitely looking out for you. >> tucker: good evening and welcome to "tucker carlson tonight." just three days ago, in an interview with nbc, john lewis of georgia called donald trump illegitimate. he followed up by saying he won't attend the inauguration. trump responded with a series of tweets. the networks went wall-to-wall with their coverage of this. you've been watching it. this is a fight democrat started and they seem to enjoy it so far. republicans enjoy it too. attacks like the one from john lewis, will it help the democrats win elections in the future? the democratic party
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