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tv   The O Reilly Factor  FOX News  March 8, 2017 5:00pm-6:01pm PST

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>> bill: we want to hear what you think about the show, so tweet us and use the hashtag #first100. we look forward to your feedback. thanks for watching, i'm shannon bream, see her tomorrow at 9:00 a.m. on "america's newsroom" with bill hemmer. >> bill: "the o'reilly factor" is on page tonight... ... >> wikileaks publishing thousands of documents. >> what could be a major security breach, a bombshell involving the cia. >> and may beat the worst hack yet in american history. >> bill: grave damage being done to america by leakers and hackers. can president trump stop the madness. we'll have a report. a protest called a day without a woman underway. what is it and is it necessary? also head, millet with the best places on earth to live, and a report that sales of ivanka trump's clothing line are
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soaring. caution, you are entering "the no spin zone." sergey kislyak begins right now. ♪ hi, i'm bill o'reilly. thanks for watching us tonight. treason in the air. that is the subject of this evening's "talking points memo"" we now know that somebody either leaked or hacked into cia files that extend how u.s. intelligence is tracking enemies of the nation. wikileaks again says it has released almost 9,000 documents from the cia center for cyber intelligence. "wall street journal" editorial put it this way. the losses from this exposure are incalculable. these tools represents millions of dollars of investment and man-hours. many will now be rendered moot as terrorists from foreign agencies abandon traceable habits." so isis and al qaeda killers now
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know how the usa is tracking them, therefore, the leaks are a treasonous act. according to the reuters news agency committee cia breach happened during the obama administration. "the factor" has learned that because some of the computer systems used by the cia are more than 40 years old, easily hacked into, easy targets of theft. we've also been told that bids are out to hijack companies to upgrade computer facilities, that will cost tens of thousands of dollars but is absolutely necessary in the gret four. no matter how sophisticated the harder it gets, we still have people committing treason inside the government. we reported on that last night. since taking office, president trump has been bedeviled by leaks. classified information being fed to the anti-trump press among them. so now we have a growing to catastrophe. obviously the cia and other intelligence agencies cannot protect their secrets.
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and so far, only a few individuals have been charged with violating national security. in 2013, then-private bradley manning was can make convicted of six forgiving stuff to wikileaks. just before he left office, president obama commuted the sentence allowing him to leave prison on may 17th of this year after seven years. many objected to the leniency showed to manning. "talking points" believes that leakers of these are actively committing treason. it's apparent that the federal government does not have a handle on how to apprehend these traders, much less stop the espionage. america is the most sophisticated country in the world but we cannot protect the private conversations of our leader. our intel secrets and our counterterrorism measures, we can protect them. obviously a dangerous situation. president trump should order the fbi to aggressively investigate
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all leaks and tax, assigning that a top priority. requesting a meeting with fbi director called me. he should do that as soon as possible and it should be televised. americans need to know this situation is completely out of control or want to create and that is "the memo" for the tapestry reaction, bob woodward, associate editor of "the washington post." do you disagree with me, bob? >> first of all, it is not treason because the press gets these things and, as you well know, carefully vets them with the government to see if they are doing something harmful, and normally, the press won't print things that is going to get people killed or that blow operations. >> bill: let me stop you there. that is the way it used to be. it's not that way anymore because of the internet. you know one of the big stories of the fault was an internet
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site putting out this raw, unsubstantiated stuff on trump that said horrible things about him. and some alleged russian transgressions. so it's not that way anymore. maybe your newspaper does it, and maybe the fox news channel does it, but the internet doesn't do that. >> okay, and that is wikileaks, and that is in a different category. i agree with you, that is a real serious problem, and that should be the focus of attention in investigating. that me investigating let me in. if you ever receive information that is classified that you broadcast or talked about in a public forum? >> bill: in my career, i don't believe i have. i received the information, but i usually find a way to verify it from another source and
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sometimes i don't report it if i believe that lives will be endangered. that's my bradley manning a 35 years, okay? because the stuff he gave wikileaks was put out, and then all of a sudden, military agents had to leave where they were because they might get killed. >> but this isn't about bradley manning. i'm asking about you. >> bill: i wouldn't put it out there unless i could verify it in another way. i would not violate the national security law. i would not do that. >> okay, but it is impossible to report on foreign affairs or intelligence or what the pentagon is doing and not deal with classified information. >> bill: i don't believe that. look, here's what i have though. i've got people in high levels and put them in shadow. i did an investigation on the fighting vehicle for "abc news"" that they cost overruns were unbelievable, that there was
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stuff all over the place, and that some active military people were profiting, and i put my guys in shadow who gave it to me, couldn't identify them, voice distorted. i'll do that, but i'm not going to put out somebody, an anonymous source. >> put all the stuff that we have used in my newspaper about sessions, about mike flynn, has been verified, and it has been presented in a careful way that it does not harm national security. >> bill: you don't think it was used in the taping of the conversation between the taping of the russian ambassador and flynn? you don't think it was used? flynn's us in my career went down the drain, we still don't know why this was put out, and we don't know what agency put it out. >> wait a minute. that is b.s. >> bill: who put it out?
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who put it out? >> first of all, who fired flynn? not "the washington post" ," president trump. >> bill: i'm not saying that flynn didn't deserve his fate. >> oh, okay. >> bill: i'm saying that you don't know who -- do you know who taped that call? >> specifically, i don't know. hey, wait a minute. this was done in a very careful way. >> bill: bob, you're dodging me now. do you come up bob woodward, know who taped that call? do you know? >> i do not know. >> bill: you are an honest man, and i believe you. so that opens the possibility that you and your paper were used, okay, by somebody who illegally tapped flynn because he is an american citizen, it is illegal to do that, it opens that possibility. surely you know that. >> wait a minute. this isn't about being used. this is about what's true.
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certainly we do. trump has relieved him of duty. >> bill: we know he wasn't honest with the vice president about describing the call, but we don't know what the call was or if it had anything to do with the trump campaign and the russians. we don't know that. >> no, but we know that it was different than what flynn had said. >> bill: therefore, he got what he deserved when he wasn't upfront with pence. >> but these are journalistic judgments. is this news, can it be presented in a way that does not harm national security. that's exactly what happened. >> bill: here is a simple question, okay? got to go over it with woodward here. the president's conversations with the mexican president and the australian prime minister, okay, or leaked, or leaked. do you consider that a legitimate form of reportage?
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>> first of all, you are in error when you think that somehow we passively sit around and wait for leaks. >> bill: i didn't say that. i didn't assume that. i ask you a direct question. those two conversations from a president to trickle foreign leaders were leaked, all right, by somebody who had access to them. do you consider that a legitimate reportage? >> because it informed people about what happened. those were legitimate stories. sport and might have put the country and verify. it surely whipped up anti-american sentiment inside mexico, it certainly did that. cathy >> lo, we try to report the news, not something that can be controlled. >> bill: i want you to be clear, i'm not disparaging you or your paper. i want to know who the leakers are, all right, who they are, and what agencies can control
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these people. and i think you do too. >> do would be surprised. i have had presidents in republican and democratic administrations provide information that is technically classified. i have had very senior people -- >> bill: off the record. don't print it. >> x not. it is, this is what happened, check it out, this is the way it can be reported and dealt with. bill, you know that happens all the time. the question is here, can it be done in a careful and fair way? >> bill: here's the question from me. it doesn't damage the country? that's the question from me. great debate. we'll continue it. we love having you on page >> thank you. >> bill: next on "the rundown"
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new poll for president trump, bolling and rivero will analyze. then miller on the best places to live in the world, and a vicious crime getting from el salvador continues to plague the nation. we'll have those reports after these messages. let's do more. add one a day men's complete with key nutrients we may need. plus heart-health support with b vitamins. one a day men's in gummies and tablets.
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thousands of dollars each year going back into my business... which adds fuel to my bottom line. what's in your wallet? >> bill: "impact" segment today, question, what is your opinion? so the president is up by 3%. do you generally approve or disapprove of president trump's temperament? approve, 30%, disapprove commit 60%, undecided, 10%. you are undecided about his temperament? do you believe president trump has shown leadership in his first 40 days? yes, 55, no, 41.
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finally, president trump has said journalists and the media are the enemy of the american people, agree or disagree. here now to analyze, geraldo rivera and eric bolling paid what jumps out at you, bolling? >> clearly, the trump win is controversial and your sink that reflected. almost all evenly divided with the exception about whether or not the media is the enemy, if they rephrase that question, "an enemy" of the american people, i think he would flip that and 59% or more would say that. >> just flipping an to the. >> clearly it could be iran. >> bill: i'm not sure about that. >> you don't think that if it said, if the immediate -- >> bill: here is how i would phrase the question. i would have said, "do you believe the media can be an enemy to the american people?" that's all.
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we are on the media, you guys love me, i know you do. >> what is the relevance of that question at all? first of all, i think this poll is absolutely legit. the university did good job in terms of getting a big sampling from what i call trumplandia. they came to the same conclusion that i think people are watching this would come to, the present case in new mexico and excellent potential, stock market is up, country and many ways better better off than it was on january 19th. but his temperament with these tweets and this recklessness that he puts out things the wiretapping allegation, that really is dragging him down, and he is really self inflicting -- >> bill: could cut back a little on the flamboyant tweets that his numbers would go up higher? >> i really do believe that. i think, first of all, his approval numbers might surprise some people. very competitive the way barack obama was.
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>> bill: that's because the economy is getting better. >> that is because the economy is getting better. i think the discussion on obamacare and what replaces it might have some drag. >> bill: not yet. >> i was tremendously enthused and positive about the fact that the same two-thirds of the american people want the dreamers to stay. >> bill: because americans are essentially fear people. -- fair people. i think it was a fair poll, there is a phrasing of the media question from our grantee or, it was, they are the bad -- they are not on the level of isis, the media. they are trying. we'll have black flags outside some of the liberal entities soon. now, the economy getting better is going to drive all of the presidents poll numbers up, right? >> putting out a couple of numbers, you have to read this. >> bill: is that a web site? >> a newsletter on a web site,
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take 10 minutes out of your day, know everything that's happening. so they put out -- i don't. three major chinese firms that are promising investment. also, today, came out with a private employer number, 298,000 people were hired last month. it blew the doors of the estimations. for an example, president obama, even in his best years, rarely exceeded 200,000. >> bill: 's of the economy is looking up. >> you know who cares about those tweets at 4:00 or 5:00 in the morning? the media cares. the american people care about the jobs. >> bill: when you're presidents, you accuse your predecessor of tapping you, everybody takes a look at that pick >> it is reckless and immature. and i love the guy. >> you know who america cares about? >> bill: unless he has evidence that members of the obama administration did it. >> even if you have evidence, is that the appropriate way --
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>> bill: appropriate way to get attention. appropriate way to get attention. >> he is the president. he controls the attention button. so when i think there is a reason he did that but i don't know what the reason is. >> it doesn't matter. it gets people talking about other things other than this whole russian issue. i'll tell you with the american people care about. they care about jobs, putting food on the table, and they care about wages. >> i disagree. >> all three things are better under president trump than they have been in years. >> i disagree that the american people do not care about russia. in the survey, russia also pulled, and two-thirds of american people want to get to the bottom of that story. if you're asking me, i don't think there was any wiretapping, and i don't think there was any russian collusion. i think that both of those cases -- >> bill: geraldo, there was wiretapping, the question was, did president obama directed? >> on the russian ambassador,
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but not -- >> bill: that is starting to die no big time, because there is no evidence to back it up. gentlemen, thanks, as always. up next, a day without women, we'll take a look at it. later, it seems ivana trump's clothing line is doing well despite nordstrom and other retailers saying the opposite. we'll have the facts, oh, those facts, up ahead. ...or shipped around the globe, ...it's handled by od employees who know that delivering freight... ...means delivering promises. od. helping the world keep promises.
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>> bill: "personal story" segment, today is international women's day, some have gone a bit further, branding it a day without a woman, calling for ladies to take a day off of work for home duties. here now to explain my, leslie marshall in los angeles, penny vance in our new york studio. ms. vance is head of concerned women, you are concerned. are you concerned about the day
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of, that some ladies are taken today? >> not many are taking them. >> they are everywhere, the women who are working and cleaning in the hotel i'm staying at, i asked them about it, they said, we are here, we are happy to have a job, we think this guy needs a chance. bottom line, these are people that are angry about donald trump being elected. >> bill: you are referencing the fact that the people who organized the day of thing are the same people who organized the women's march in january. and so they are angry that trump's president, but there has to be a theme, leslie, you are in tune with his crew. what is the theme? we are happy to get you. i didn't know whether you are going to be working today or not, but here you are. but why do they not want ladies to take off work? >> first of all, wearing red is one way to support and show your
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solidarity, which i'm doing, secondly, a lot of women can't take the day off of work and that is actually one of the grapes. a lot of women and even some women who voted for the president, are viewing him and his administration as being antiwoman and rolling back the clock and regards to women's issues. >> bill: i still don't know why you want to take off from work. are you trying to get across to the guys how much we need you? i mean, is that the point of taking off from work? >> you know, historically, if you look back to the montgomery bus boycott, 381 days, they showed what they could do with their economic power. >> bill: but i don't know what the beef is. i nobody beef was with the montgomery boycott, but i don't know what the beef is? what is the beef? >> the beef is that the politicians of this country, the president and his administration, are not listening to the issues that we, as women, care about.
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this sends a clear message, you have to look at both politics and the pocketbook. >> bill: i think you just made penny's point that it is people who don't like trump who are doing this. >> no, no. >> bill: weight. is there a legitimate beef in your world, the people you deal with, about gender equality in america. >> i agree with hillary clinton that there has never been another time in history that it is better to be born female, and certainly no better place to be born female been the united states. >> bill: that's positive, but is there room for improvement? >> always! >> bill: and what areas. let's country to get at. >> women, by the way, outplacement and college degrees, law degrees, medical degrees, but we're not at the very tip-top, the ceos. >> bill: running those companies. >> i would say this message is so wrong.
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it should be the opposite. you don't make the boardroom by staying home and pouting. we should have told women, and we are using the hashtag #womenmakeamericawork. that is how you become ceos. >> are you disenchanted because more women aren't leading in certain industries? >> we have more opportunities than anywhere in the world. >> bill: you are optimistic. are you pessimistic or us to optimistic, leslie? >> optimistic about the women of the future looking at my daughter and the next generation of women and it starts now. two-thirds of the women, two-thirds of the minimum wage earners in this country are women. they are asking for more money for a higher minimum wage, to be specific. a lot of women are saying they don't like some of the decisions that are being made with regard to education, and there people that voted for trump -- >> bill: leslie, you have to
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zero in on your beef. if it is minimum wage, we understand that. >> i am. >> bill: the one it's everything, that doesn't do us any good. ladies, thank you. plenty more ahead. as "the factor" moves ahead today, ms-13, full of illegal criminals, we'll tell you what's going on. and miller on the best places to live on the planet. also, ivanka trump's clothing line of family doing very well despite reports. hope you stay tuned for those.
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>> bill: "the factor" follow-up segments, a gang called ms-13 is causing trouble, and not just in the big cities, in the suburbs, 13 a large gang members have been invited for murder and other crimes. >> forgot members of the ms-13 gang were charged in connection to the september slayings, two teens found beaten to death make death in a brentford neighborhood. u.s. attorney announcing a 41 count indictment including racketeering and obstruction of justice against a total of 13 ms-13 gang members. according to officials, ten of the 13 members indicted are here illegally. >> bill: with us here in new york, timothy viti, police commissioner of the county. you work with officials on this case? >> absolutely, this is with the way you bring them down.
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the work happens on the street, of course. our officers are out there working hard, keeping pressure -- >> bill: you get the call that these two young girls are murdered, so you go out and investigate, but did you find out? >> we found out that ms-13 was responsible. they went out hunting for these girls. >> bill: today know these girls? >> they knew one. >> bill: this for young girls, did they want to kill them for any reason? >> a schoolyard beef that was going on between kayla and these savages. >> and this other girl was with her so she died as well. >> wrong place, wrong time. >> bill: you are not a sanctuary county. if you see somebody in the country illegally, you don't automatically get them a pass.
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>> when we arrest someone and they are here illegally, we notified the department of homeland security and they will take whatever action they deem appropriate. stolen right away. -- >> bill: right >> we work very closely with their immigrant communitier immigrant communities are strong supporters of law enforcement. >> bill: you don't get any backlash? >> certainly there is some. we do a lot of community engagement, we explain our policies so folks know what we're doing and why we are doing it. >> bill: new york city, totally opposite. as soon as you to get into the county, cops are told not to, upon arrest, alert homeland security. let's take a look at the el salvador in gang. when we first aware that they showed up in suffolk county, the suburbs, and what do they do? >> we have had a presence of ms-13 and suffolk county for many, many years, but we did see a uptick in recent years. why this gang is so dangerous, unlike some of the other gangs who sell drugs for money and they engage in extortion and then use violence to protect that economic activity, this
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gang and engages in violence for sport. they are particularly dangerous. they engage in just brutal levels of violence and we need to do everything we can to get them off our streets. >> bill: 14 indicted, ten are illegal aliens. i don't know how many had a record. do you know how many had a prior record out of the ten who are illegal? >> the individuals who were charged did not have a record. >> bill: they did not have a record, but they were in a gang, and that is a deportation offense. how many ms-13s are there in suffolk county? >> approximately 13. >> bill: 300? and how many are illegal aliens? do you know? >> we don't have the numbers on that. we collect as much intelligence as possible. we are finding that a lot of folks are legally entering the southern border and then -- they are under age and detained by the department homeland security and transfer to department of health. there is a program called unaccompanied children program.
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>> bill: but a base of 300 el salvador in gang members, going to join their pals. >> ms-13 recruits folks who are recently immigrated to this country, whether illegally or legally, we have to put them away. stone keep us posted about what happens. when we come back, it will be "miller time." the best places on earth in which to live. miller, next.
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>> announcer: "the o'reilly factor." the number one cable news show for 16 years and counting. >> bill: thanks for staying with us. i'm bill o'reilly. in the "miller time" segment, the u.s. has slipped to seventh and best country rankings. switzerland, number one. canada, united kingdom, germany, japan, sweden, then us. than australia, france, and norway. here now from santa barbara, california, dennis miller. what do you think of the list, miller? >> billy, my feminine side almost didn't come in today. a lot of gals taking off. sleeping in. i am woman, care may snore. we might be seventh, i still say we are number one and sense of
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humor, and to prove that, i have a riddle. can i play a quick riddle on you? here's my riddle. do you know when 11:59:00 p.m. occurs? >> bill: one minute before midnight. >> at the end of the day. at the end of the day. >> bill: you are punishing me, miller. you are punishing me. we have letters on that. switzerland. >> let's break down the other countries. all right. usually i am neutral on switzerland, but it's got its problems too. grandpa is up at 6:00 in the morning blowing on the recolor horn. it got problems there. number two, canada, i like canada. it has given me my wife. i love canada. but too many petulant american actors migrating up there. what's that? none of them went. sorry, canada. love the u.k. act number three,
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just not as much as the u.s. germany, i hear it is great, but the hun gets a little flippy every once in a while, and he don't want to be in that berlin hotel when they throw that wall up again overnight. number five, japan, i like japan, but i'm bad with chopsticks, and the green tea has a binding effect in my small intestines to the point where i want to commit seppuku. that puts us at seven, i forget to the rest of them were. >> bill: australia, france, and norway. but they are behind us. >> norway? norway? norway is the little plastic village you set up under your christmas tree once a year. the united states is a big honking train that comes through and makes the whole thing even vaguely interesting. get out of here with norway creates for one of the united states has more opportunity. but switzerland is a nice country. you learn how to yodel.
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you got a big comforter on you every night. and it's very clean. canada, we like canada. it's a little brisk, but we like it. >> you mean that big comforter named helga? >> bill: whatever the comforter is named, it is okay with me. now, we mentioned australia. this is great. in melbourne, which is a nice town, okay, they have little icons. >> everything is nice. >> bill: not everything. glasgow, scotland, not a nice town. now, they have little icons, you see, but now they are both genders. it used to be they were just men crossing the street, and now they had to spend all the money to get some ladies on the traffic light icons to be politically correct, miller. >> you know it is going to happen here, billy? there are going to be a lot of intersection crashes now, guys not paying attention, checking out -- look at that silhouette
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on the sign. is she stacked! boom, crash, rack. why is this in melbourne? i don't know who the woman is in charge of that organization who is putting this through, but i guarantee you she doesn't drive a stick. >> bill: miller, it is a different world than the one you and i grew up in. back then, the usa it was number one, maybe austria was number two, now austria is not even on the list. >> billy, let me say this, different in many ways, but in another world, some of these feminists are stuck in a virginia slims ad from a 1956 "look" magazine. >> bill: 25,000 tickets to see it miller, watters, and me, not many remain. check it out on billoreilly.com.
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>> bill: back of the book segments tonight, "did you see that?" they have remembered that nordstrom and other retail stores embarrassed ivanka trumped by downgrading her line of clothing saying sales were slow. according to report on cs nbc, that's not true. trish reagan, you see her every day on the fox business network pizza sales are good for the ivanka line? >> we contacted the company, they say it has never been better. the last four weeks or so, it has been through the roof. this is important. you think about the timing, you'll recall, there was a big fiasco, they said it is because
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of poor sales. what do you know, women saw that, bill, and they went out and they started spending on ivanka trump's clothing line. >> bill: here's the key clothing line. did nordstrom have a legitimate right because the ivanka stuff was not moving or did they make it up because there was this grab your wallet thing, this part left protest that was getting into the hierarchy, some believe they just caved, nothing wrong with it. >> i think that completely backfired, women went out, grabbed their wallet. the company previously said the sales were down, we contacted them today to say, don't you feel bad now that you let that go? a big opportunity? and they said, we don't comment on that. trying to have their cake and eat it too. >> bill: i guess we could find
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out whether this whole ivanka trumped controversy was generated by these far left people who wanted to punish the trump family or if sales did rocket up after this became a known and women, as he pointed out saying, we don't like this. >> i think nordstrom was concerned from a political perspective because of the grab your wallet campaign. they went christmas shopping. >> bill: nordstrom is a loser because they don't have the trump stuff, and the ladies found it. >> i should point out, sales are up better than 300%. >> bill: wow, 300%. i don't know if ivanka needs the money. do you follow football? sports? >> a little bit. >> bill: you know colin cabinet, kneeled down, a soccer lady that did the same thing.
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>> ♪ what so proudly we hailed the twilight's last gleaming ♪ ♪ and the home of the brave >> bill: all right, so the woman come up what is her name here? she was kneeling down for protest reasons, now they soccer people say, you can't kneel down anymore. >> the u.s. federation came out and said, you can't kneel, we're not going to allow it, whether you are on the men's team, the women's team, or the youth team. she was doing this, as you said, to show her support for colin kaepernick. >> bill: people who play international games, this is in the pro league not like the radicals. but these are the people who
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play in the international leaks that is regulated by this agency. >> you think about it, and international league. if you're playing against priscilla, you don't really want americans kneeling. >> bill: said, we're going to throw you off the team if you kneel down. >> done. weibel c. she is out for an injury right now. >> bill: we will see. here you go. an earthquake warning from california, "the tip" moments away. to protect them. making the right decisions today for your long-term financial future can protect you and your family, and preserve your legacy. ask a financial advisor how retirement and life insurance solutions from pacific life can help you plan for your future.
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president obama is a smart guy, i gave in the resumption of incense lacking evidence for it that's a fair thing to do, is it not? bill, and your talk with newt gingrich, you both said that general flynn was in his office with trump tower talking to the russian ambassador, he said he was possibly in the office number which is it? fair question, we believe the conversation took place inside trump tower based on what we were told but we don't have 100 sent confirmation. the dictionary defines immigrant is a person who comes to live permanently in a former country
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than denmark therefore dr. dr. carson's description of slaves is correct. you're not an immigrant if you're kidnapped and taken to a foreign country. there is no excuse for ben carson, he made neat sorry i donated to his campaign. too harsh in my opinion. lawrence and simplot to california, bill, agree with you about not saying at the end of the day, i put that right up there with it is what it is, i could do without hearing either one ever again. me too. how about amazing? everything is not amazing! save it for when it genuinely i is. montgomery, alabama, just finished reading killing the rising sun, what an awesome testimony to the toughness of the greatest generation. i believe the snowflake generation should read this book if they think their lives are so
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tough. and they should read old school too. snowflakes are going to love that. finally tonight the "tip of the day," as i mentioned, all americans should be skeptical about what they read these days as the truth is elusive. when i saw a new study by the scripps institution of oceanography out of the university of california san diego, i was concerned. the study says a big earthquake could hit out of there at any time, because of the 19-mile rose canyon fault which begins in san diego's mission valley and heads off shore. apparently the new the potential for a big disaster around los angeles exists. but how much potential? is this a warning? or an observation? didn't say in the article.
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if so we called scripps to get some perspective. by airtime, they had not answered us. that's not good. we'll try again tomorrow, but for now, continue to be skeptical about what you read. factor tip of the day. if there's a big earthquake that's inevitable, we need to know about it. that's it for us tonight. check out the fox news factor web site, different from billoreilly.com, we'd like you to spout off about the factor at o'reilly at fox news.com, name a town if you wish to opine. word of the day, do not be invidious if writing to the factor, the river clyde, you can walk across that river on the stuff on top of it. i know i'm going to get the
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scott's, not liking this irish guy for this comment. thanks for watching us tonight, i'm bill o'reilly, the spin stops here because we're definitely looking out for you. ♪ >> tucker: welcome to "tucker carlson tonight," who does america belong to you what to mark or does it belong to the world what to mark do those people have an obligation to assimilate into the culture already present. univision anchor jorge ramos will debate those questions in a minute. very strange days in washington, republicans had at seven years to agree on able obamacare replacement and if they're already squabbling over a bill they just revealed yesterday. they've done very little to implement the trumps agenda, is that? paul ryan