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tv   The Five  FOX News  April 18, 2017 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT

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they are your promises. you are the bull in the china shop. start rattling. start breaking things. time is wasting. see you tomorrow. >> eric: i'm eric bolling with kimberly guilfoyle, bob beckel, dana perino, and greg gutfeld. it is 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." president trump keeps delivering on his promise to protect american jobs, signing an executive order titled buy american hire american. it orders agencies to overhaul the h1b visa program that some companies regularly abuse to hire foreign workers instead of americans. the president promoted his agenda at the headquarters of
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snap-on, a tool manufacturer in wisconsin. >> the american people voted to end the theft of american prosperity. they voted to bring back their jobs and bring back their dreams into our country. with this action, we are sending a powerful signal to the world we are going to defend our workers, protect our jobs and finally put america first. america first. you better believe it. it's time, right? >> eric: he said "aggressively promote and use american-made goods and ensure american labor is used as much as possible." >> kimberly: this is the follow through on the campaign rhetoric, the promises he made to the working men and women across the country that he was going to put america first, that he was encouraging them to buy
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american, make in america. that's what this is about. it's about checking the box on the list of campaign promises and the platform that he had in terms of how we want to focus the economy in this country. >> eric: i want to talk about the h1b visa program. bob, you had concerns about using american workers and using american goods first. >> bob: here's one. if you're ordering, buy american means he orders agencies to purchase only american products. the general rule in the business committee, if that were something spread out in the business community as a general issue, you would find resistance, would you not? not going out in the marketplace and find the cheapest product available to do the job. that was my understanding of what free markets were about. this runs a little counter to that. >> eric: it definitely does but this is the federal agencies he's talking about.
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not suggesting american corporations, i mean, unless there is a tax-exempt of -- tax incentive. he's asking for corporations to buy american, higher american but that may not be it. >> dana: knowing donald trump is serious about immigration policy. i think it's a deterrent. him saying, telling the federal agencies come he is trying to direct something. this is not law, not actual regulation. this is a suggestion and telling the agency to try to do it where you can. i do think there's something to be set for bob is talking about in terms of the free market because we are talking about jobs, for one, but we are also interested in wages. want to make sure you are able to pay people the best possible wage in order for it to be efficient if we are also talking about consumers and taxpayers. taxpayers want to get the best deal that they can get as well.
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it's a little bit more complicated but i would give them an a+ for marketing for buy american, hire american. >> eric: he hit on the topic that's been going back and forth. the cracked out of foreign steel being dumped into the u.s. and i think he meant at some point, requiring as much u.s. steel to be used in the pipelines and other infrastructure programs. >> greg: the strong message, what hit me the most was it wasn't about jobs. it was about craft. he was talking about people using tools and making stuff. it was a call back to the past and trying to say this could be part of our future. i thought that was the most moving thing. nothing may come out of it but what he's trying to say is that we used to be a country that made things, and it made you feel good. it's a restorative feeling,
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psychological effect. that's why he brought up vocational school and training which is so important. this may be a temporary challenge that we wished we had in ten years because robots do not sleep. the do not unionize. they do not demand a wage or health care. what happens when you see 60 million people who are suddenly out of jobs, let's say 20 years from now, you hear about, in silicon valley the billionaires building panic rooms. it's not because of north korea. it is because of north carolina. what happens when you have able-bodied people no longer needed to work? what happens to them? i think this technological revolution is going to make the industrial revolution look like nothing because in the industrial revolution a person who worked on a farm could work at a factory, but a person on the assembly line can't build the assembly line. >> eric: if that's the case, not saying it's not. it may very well be. i think a lot of billionaires involved in business would
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agree. bill gates suggested we tax robots as individuals. so corporation is taxed on its profits but if you a use a robot in place of an american worker, he suggests, your thoughts on taxing a robot the way we tax an individual. >> greg: you can't stop progress. this is the first time in history that you can use fewer people and create more. it used to take ten people on an assembly line would do ten times the amount of work as one person. now one person can do the work of ten people, so tax a robot brady would be like taxing anything. >> bob: the thing you said about going back, it sounds nice and it sounds nostalgic and all that but the reality is the reason we are not producing as much is that american companies are going to other countries where they get it produced cheaper, where robots are taking over, where technology is taking over. he can talk all he wants about going back to the good old days. it's gone, it's over. it's finished.
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>> eric: some of the pushback on the taxes on robots would be, the incentive to use a robot is it's cheaper. if you're going to make it more expensive by taxing it, you want to stop any activity, tax it more. >> greg: that's not a free market. >> dana: i agree. one of the reasons gates said that was that if you take, if you take all these workers and they no longer have jobs and incomes, how are you going to get tax in order to fund the government? that was part of it. >> kimberly: operate as a disincentive to say i'm going to take a human worker versus a robot. like greg said, you really can't stop the forward progression of technology. >> eric: you can if you tax edge. >> kimberly: you can try. eventually, you are playing a game of attrition. eventually it will break down and you're going to have to go with it. you have to figure out ways and innovate for other jobs that you can have. people do, so you can keep
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filling the workforce. i think it's very important. people are upset about the h1b visas for the same reasons they are upset about the robots. they are taking jobs from the american worker. >> greg: raising the minimum wage lends itself to automation. >> bob: we are buying robots from china. we could make those here. >> dana: we could go to robot camp. >> eric: here is more from the president today on the hire american portion. >> right now, widespread abuse in our immigration system is allowing american workers of all backgrounds to be replaced by workers brought in from other countries to fill the same job for sometimes less pay. this will. american workers have long called for reforms to end these visa abuses, and today their calls are being answered for the first time. that includes taking the first steps to set in motion a long
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overdue reform of h1b visas. >> eric: dana, you and i have spoken about this. the h1b visa program, 85,000 workers given out on the lottery basis. trump is saying give those visas to the most skilled workers first. >> dana: the companies would say they want to do that, they would like to hire american workers but the requirement is you have to show there was no qualified american you could hire that could do that job. there was some discrepancy when it came to disney. the court found disney did not lie, workers had sided disney lied. the court found they didn't but that was a moving story because you had people working, doing really good jobs and they were having to train their replacements so it was humiliating for them as well. i think that's what he was tapping into. i don't know if this has any real world impacts because it's a request for the agency to
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study the problem but just by him raising it it will probably make sure companies follow the letter of the law. >> bob: what happens is we bring the chinese over here, we educate them and give them the best technology training they could possibly get. they go back home and then we hire them at a lower wage to come back to silicon valley. the other thing he's talking about, and this is where trump is in real trouble, you know who uses that? the last three years, trump. people applied for 15,000 jobs for the trump organizations on h1b. >> greg: seasonal? >> bob: part of it has to do with the vineyards. part of it had to do with building some of his buildings in new york. at least the guy could say i've done it myself and i think it's probably something we can change but he won't do that. >> eric: you want to talk about the h1b visa? say fark trying to figure out, what is the abuse? is it the computer programmer
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who won't work who's losing the job or is it the computer programmer who will work for that wage? what we are arguing about is we are trying to help the guy from india who is coming over who wants that wage. >> eric: the original idea b, behind the h1b visa program is that you have to exhaust your ability to fill the position within america and then you go to the h1b visa program. companies are abusing it by saying it's cheaper to do it this way. >> kimberly: there are loopholes. they found multiple violations and abuses of that requirement saying make a good-faith effort to try and employ american worker to be able to do this job before you go to the second layer to an h1b visa. that's one of the bills introduced by durbin and grassley. if we are going to give h1b visas out, were going to preselect and get the best and brightest of those so there's a
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hierarchy in terms of who's going to have a shot at those jobs once they've tried to fill it with an american. >> bob: you said something about, what great line. hire american, buy american. you can have a bad day when that's your lead. however, having said that, let's assume 25% of these things are abused, the h1b, which is a lot. you are talking about probably 60,000 jobs that are legitimate and 25,000 or 20,000 are not. that is only 20,000 jobs out of hundreds of millions of jobs. it sounds good but it's not a big part of the employment problem. >> eric: imagine the p.r. nightmare you have when the company says we are pushing back against your hire american, buy american. >> greg: the mythical tax cut i'm waiting for. you're going to see your favorite band and set of playing "stairway to heaven" he keeps playing "all my love."
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>> dana: playing the new stuff. everybody hates that. >> kimberly: that is brutal. >> greg: sammy hagar instead of david lee roth. that was my eighth grade. >> eric: trump administration sets its sights on the ms13 and other violent gangs in america and blames the obama administration for allowing them to become a major threat to our safety. that is next. [vo] quickbooks introduces jeanette and her new mobile wedding business. at first, getting paid was tough... until she got quickbooks. now she sends invoices, sees when they've been viewed and-ta-dah-paid twice as fast for free. visit quickbooks-dot-com.
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>> we have gotten tremendous criminals out of the country. i'm talking about illegal immigrants that were here that cause tremendous crime, that have murdered people, horrible things have happened. they are getting the hell out of they are going to prison. it >> kimberly: stepping up the war against violent gangs in america paired homeland security secretary john kelly said criminal gangs are among the biggest threats facing the united states. >> one of the greatest hazards is from transnational criminal organizations. the air without loss, conscience, or respect for human life. they take the form of drug cartels are international gangs like ms13.
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we have set out to stop the movement to the greatest degree we can. >> kimberly: earlier, attorney general jeff sessions delivered this morning. >> let me state this clearly buried under president trump, the justice department has zero tolerance for gang violence. transnational criminal organizations like ms13 represent one of the gravest threats to our american safety. if you are a gang member, we will find you. we will devastate your network. we will starve your revenue sources, deplete your ranks, and sees your profits. >> kimberly: president trump blames the obama administration's weak illegal immigration policies for allowing gangs to form in cities across america. he's right. her eyes some prosecutors, proliferation of gang violence, prosecuting so many cases cases. in los angeles and san francisco. the number of individuals who
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came into the criminal justice system that were violating the law by being illegal and and te gang's upon those people, they gravitate and aggregate is unit. ms13 is one of the vicious crimes, they are prevalent in the criminal justice system come in the prison system. across the country, they are running some serious drug trafficking and gongs turtle guns >> dana: i don't think it's fair for president trump to blame president obama. in 2004, there is a push to say we have a huge problem across the country and it's been proliferating. i don't know if there is something specific president obama did that president trump wants to .2 but i will say you see the administration setting
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priorities. they are almost finished with their 100 days. they have their feet on the ground. they've decided, international criminal gangs proliferating in america are what they want to target, so be it. >> bob: is not an administration that hasn't targeted them. how did they get here? under ronald reagan. they came in here and they were allowed in this country, a free pass because they were supposedly political prisoners. now we are dealing with their kids who were born here were american citizens. this threat has been going on well before obama was here. in fact, it went down someone obama was here. the thing about trump is, he says we exported all these -- who? naming one serious criminal who killed somebody. >> eric: we know the numbers. 70% decrease in border crossing
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crossings. >> bob: if he's going to shoot his mouth off, say who it is. >> eric: how about how do you fix it? what's the right answer? taking a step in the right direction is targeting ms13. 70,000 gang members in this country. there are 70,000 gang bangers walking around. >> bob: you talk to every cop who has been prioritizing these guys. >> eric: we had a bad gang problem in the '80s. in every major city in america including l.a., probably especially l.a. the task force targeted the gangs and went after heightened sentencing of gang members. you have to get back to it. >> kimberly: you have to deport them and keep them out.
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this has obviously been a long problem. i'm not trying to say, when i was a prosecutor, it wasn't when president obama was in office. i am talking about something that's entrenched, problem that hasn't gotten any better. we haven't been enforcing the laws like we should. not catch and release. these guys have got to be deported, kept out of the country. very important to keep them out. a lot of them for unaccompanied children who came in from el salvador et cetera. they are easy bait for the gangs. >> greg: whenever i hear ms13, i think of the movie rating. ms13 may contain murder and hard drugs. now playing in every sanctuary city. i think it's the sad triumph of modern life and multiculturalism that targeting illegal criminal gangs is still considered somewhat controversial. that you can actually have a debate about it or that you treat it as news that you have to announce that this is what
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you are doing. and there is actual fact, it blows my mind. there are things you can do about it. >> kimberly: not put them in your schools. >> greg: throw them out and also legalize drugs. then they have no money. >> dana: as i understand, the l.a.p.d. -- >> kimberly: they have well established connections to terrorist organizations like hezbollah. >> eric: your point that they are probably legal citizens as well taken. >> dana: often they are in jail for drug crimes. >> bob: you can't export them if they are americans. it's not going to work out that way. >> kimberly: these are the guys who did the ritual slaughtering because someone was possessed by a demon. democrats are hoping to pull off an upset in georgia by turning a
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red seat blue. president trump is closely following today's special election in the south, delivering a sharp attack on the top democratic candidate next. think again.
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just start as early as you can. it's going to pay off in the future. if we all start saving a little more today, we'll all be better prepared tomorrow. prudential. bring your challenges. ♪ >> dana: a congressional race in georgia sixth district is getting a lot of attention. democrats have aimed to turn it into a referendum on president trump, pinning their hopes on a 30-year-old candidate named jon ossoff to slip a seat that usually goes to republicans. the president is hoping to stop them, tweeting "democrat jon ossoff would be a disaster in congress. weak on crime and illegal immigration. bad for jobs and want higher taxes." >> appreciate the president's interest, sounds like he's misinformed about my priorities.
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if he wants to learn a little bit more about my priorities, you can visit the website online and learn where i stand on the issues. >> dana: i bet the president took him up on that. not really. polls close tonight at 7:00 p.m. eastern. we'll probably have resulted early because there was a lot of early voting, 57,000 people. a little bit different in a special because you had 18 candidates running. if he gets to 50%, he would be able to win the seat. your expectation for this, what do you think? you know the district well. >> bob: i do. i can tell you that the democrats are way ahead in early voting, then the republicans caught up. the republicans woke up and realized met this guy has gotten $8 million sent into his campaign. >> dana: we should point out he's come he doesn't live in the district. >> bob: has an enormous amount of money for that siege. here's what's going to happen. you've got something like ten or
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11 republicans and then you got a couple independents and you've got five democrats. the other democrats don't matter paid he will come in first, and my guess is upper 30s, lower 40s and the former secretary of state, republican secretary of state is running. if she comes in number two, then you're going to have a runoff election in june and in that district, the reason democrats like it is because trump only one back by 1%. in a state -- that kind of district is the typical suburban republican people who go, i hate to say this, to the country club a lot but they were not trump people. these are not rural republicans. >> dana: you don't think he's going to get to 50%? >> bob: no, if he does, then there really is a huge -- >> dana: i want to ask greg
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about the fact that you have 11 republicans running. one of the things we talked about in the presidential election, so many candidates it is so watered down. i guess it's a good thing so many people want to run for office. >> greg: i have one thing in common with jon ossoff. neither of us can vote for jon ossoff. >> dana: he says he grew up in the district and he's been living down by emory university. >> greg: i don't care. i don't even know this person. we are missing the hilarious point about this. having this problem means you won. let's say last year a genie approached you and said you have two choices per you could win the white house but possibly lose the seat in georgia or youe the white house but that seat is safe in georgia. i think having the white house, i think having the problem is, you won the general. mr. price moved up. the price is right. if hillary had won, we wouldn't
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be doing this segment. we would be doing a segment on how bill clinton woke up in the rose garden without his pants. >> dana: there is a way the republicans look, look positive on this. they won't be able to get to 50 50%. may be other house republicans could take a look at the race and say if we were able to win that one, then we don't have to worry about anything and we can get behind the president's agenda with a little more confidence. >> eric: i think bob is right. the republicans took their eye off the ball, assuming it was going to be a safe seat. but bob also points out, it doesn't look like jon ossoff is going to get to 50. what happened was, late in the game, donald trump made some robo calls and they in a press to get behind the republican candidate. karen had dell. she did better. they need to make sure ossoff
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doesn't get to 50 and the whisper is that by june 20, the runoff. she will get more support. >> dana: karen handel was given a little bit of a boost because the chairman who had worked on president trump's campaign in that area endorsed her. that haven't happened before today. what do you think kimberly? >> kimberly: the kimberly guilfoyle institute, highly regarded. it's a big boost and they should've consolidated an end a larger push. they are like, now okay let's focus and get behind it. 95% of this guys money is coming from outside the district and he doesn't even live inside the district. it is hardly charming at this point. it's all about against trump. you have hollywood celebrities doing ads. ultimately i don't think he's
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going to get it. >> greg: why is this election getting any attention? it's because the liberals need a glimmer of hope and comfort after this crushing experience. they thought they had it in the bag and they didn't. it's kind of sad. it's like they are waiting outside a grocery store hoping for somebody to throw them a used more often. >> bob: there's been one special election in kansas, usually a huge republican district. it was very close. the fact that you have a democratic running in this, it tells you there's an anti-trump movement out there and a lot of people running in tough seats who are republicans are worried. >> eric: 11 republicans. >> dana: there is not that many. >> bob: but even, a republican seas, it's not unusual to get a bunch of people running. >> dana: i think it's good people want to run for office. >> greg: he is a 31-year-old filmmaker. i'm sure he has all the answers.
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>> dana: actually, he's only 30. >> greg: rosie o'donnell is supporting him, so i do the rosy rule. >> dana: is the american flag to political to be part of our nation's pastime? greg's take next yeah... yeah, then how'd i get this... ...allstate safe driving bonus check? ...only allstate sends you a bonus check for every six months you're accident free. silence. it's good to be in, good hands.
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♪ >> greg: over the weekend, the atlanta braves unfurled a giant flag before the national anthem. this caused an nbc baseball writer to tweet "will you keep politics out of sports please? we like sports to be politics free." he was probably poking fun who slammed colin kaepernick for merging politics with sports period he was saying that a big flag is just as political as a protest against it. obviously he's wrong. most people see the flag not as
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a political symbol but a symbol of the place they love. sometimes you have to be reminded of how much you love i it. ♪ she's awesome. anyway, it's only the press, academia, and the entertainment world that portrays patriotism as cynical, political manipulation buried only they can see that because they are so much smarter than the rest of us. it's the media assuming intent without ever asking, did you vote for trump? you are racist and you don't even know it. you can stand hillary, you are sexist and you don't even know it. you have a flag, you are a jingoistic freak. for decades, leftism labeled all things political so as no surprise that now patriotism is a political act too. i say screw them. i hope we can agree on one thin thing. jose sanchez is awesome. and a marine. he lost part of his left leg in
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afghanistan but still ran the entire boston marathon waving our flag. so maybe that's conspicuous patriotism but i doubt it. sometimes a flag is just a flag and for some heroes like jose, it's something even more. it's interesting that no matter what, dana, you can't enjoy anything without someone taking a hot political take on it. like, i've got to get out there and make my hot political sensibility known and tweeted. i tried to be as stupid as possible on twitter. >> kimberly: it's worked. >> bob: you've succeeded. >> kimberly: a for effort. >> dana: i think, i feel like in a way let the market decide. every stadium is packed. the fans are coming out. you can't buy tickets to some of these things. they are coming out because they enjoy the feeling of its prey they like the sport, the camaraderie, the whole thing, and if patriotism is part of it,
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let's before it. >> greg: eric, how can patriotism be a political act? that's how they are casting it. >> eric: this guy, i predict a walk back in his policy. you know it the most important thing is? the fans. baseball fans are patriotic. baseball and apple pie. can you imagine the blowback this poor guy's going to get? he owes the american people an apology. you are right, greg. the marine running in the boston marathon who carries the flag, that is patriotism. there is no politics and that whatsoever. the flag is not politics. >> greg: bob, do you think people manipulate? >> bob: if you think the american flag is not politicized right now, ever since 9/11, both the democrats and republicans have been trying to take the american flag and make it theirs. if you don't have a flag pin on
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and you are a politician, you get booed. if you don't used to flag the right way against your opponents. how many campaigns have we seen accusing someone of being unpatriotic because they didn't do this without. the flag has become politicized. in politics, so what? let them have flags all they want. people love the american flag. it has become politicized and it's going to stay politicized. >> eric: did you see what happened for colin kaepernick for leaning down during the national anthem? the same blowback is going to happen to this guy. >> greg: my problem with what you are saying bob is that you are acting like you are saying you understand the intent of someone who appreciates the flag. you are saying it's a political act. what if they just love their country? >> bob: i am saying politicians in both parties have been trying to usurp the flag since 9/11 and make it big part of their campaign. >> kimberly: but you are not saying that about this gentleman. >> bob: no.
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>> greg: this guy is trying to make a trolling joke. how flag is as political as of protest. i think he walked into it. >> kimberly: you need to look at subjective intent. what is the individual who wants to wear the flag pin or have a flag at their house, so be it. i think it's patriotic 100%. a lot of people fought in men and women served in the military and lost their lives and gave their blood and families don't have parents now because of the sacrifices people have made. god bless america and the flag. >> eric: good luck if you want to try to walk that back. nbc sports announcer. are you kidding me? you start every sports game in america with the national anthe anthem. >> kimberly: baseball, apple high and the flag. >> greg: most drivers are still using their phones behind the wheel. a scary new survey next. when a fire destroyed
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♪ >> bob: we all know we should never be looking down at our phones are operating them while driving but according to a new study most of us are doing it anyway. a survey of 3 million drivers found most of them use their
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phones in some way 88% of the trips they were on. that is pretty scary. the number of traffic deaths in america has been increasing since 2015 after a 40 year decline. we need to all wise and up and stop texting and driving and distracting ourselves from the road. eric, my two kids grew up on texting and i know they text when they drive. it absolutely is dangerous. most of these increases in traffic accidents among young people who use this as an a major form of communication. >> eric: a lot of people are texting and driving. if you think you can do it and you think you are a good driver while you do it, this morning on the way in, my uber driver was texting while he was driving. i could see him going off the road and correcting himself and he would look. when you are doing it yourself, you think you are doing okay. when you are sitting in the backseat and seeing someone do it, you realize it's not a good idea. so don't do it.
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>> dana: i haven't driven myself in six or seven years since we moved to new york. when i'm in the passenger seat and i see other people doing it, it infuriates me. they are putting themselves in danger. they are putting us in danger. i can't wait for the days of driverless cars. because the human error gets taken out event. you can sit in the backseat and text all you want. one time, i think i saw it on oprah, she said put your phone in the backseat. so you can't reach it and use the voice technology through the console. >> kimberly: you haven't driven in six or seven years. >> dana: no. he >> kimberly: you should let me drive you around. >> bob: the study also suffer every second you spend texting, you are 20% more likely to have a fatal -- 20 times. >> eric: 20 times more likely. >> bob: you don't drive, do you? >> greg: no. but i love that we have all the stock footage of people texting
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while driving. we need this footage, so go out on the road and text. nothing is as important to texting as it is to steer and control a 2-ton pile of metal. the problem with texting is it makes all communication feel urgent, that task there used to be a large gap in time. if someone calls you, you can wait a couple hours and call them back. now if you hear the noise, you've got to get on eights. this scarier message about it is your death or injury may be out of your control. it's not that you are texting or driving. it's that they are. what that means for you is that when you are in the crosswalk in new york city, you have to be hypervigilant. when you are in your car, you have to wear your seat belt because it's not going to be. it's not going to view texting. it's going to be an 18-year-old coming at you like a missile. it's a phone plus a car equals a missile. he >> kimberly: it is the same
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thing with drunk driving. >> greg: you have to assume it is the other person is going to do you win. >> bob: that's what i tell my kids. it may not be you but it may be the person next to you. >> kimberly: wear your seat belt. >> bob: and not text. >> kimberly: be very careful. >> greg: or take the bus. >> kimberly: you must have been the worst, most neurotic, crazy driver. did you have a booster seat? >> greg: i am not going to comment. >> bob: "one more thing" is up next. [ male announcer ] imagine what you wear every day
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♪ >> eric: i will kick it off. a couple nice law enforcement stories. do you remember this painting? a federal judge has ruled it will not go up even though representative lacy clay wanted to be rehung in the capital. it's not going to happen. go to this awesome story i saw over the weekend. nypd tweeting this. that is the daughter of sergeant timothy roy, who was killed on 9/11. she is going to join new york's finest, and we say to you britney roy, god bless. she lost her father on 9/11 and she is following in his footsteps. >> kimberly: it is time for honoring heroes. a navy sailor from miami helped save the life of an elderly
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woman when she suffered a medical emergency. this was during his flight to japan. this is hospital corpsman christopher marroquin. he was alerted when this woman was suffering, and she almost died. she is 80 years old. he performed three cycles of cpr on the woman before he and physician used a defibrillator to bring her back to life and she was taken to the hospital in good condition when they arrived in japan. how incredible is that? god bless him for his service and for saving a life. >> eric: dana. >> dana: if you go to coachella, it's a festival i've never gone to but let's say you go as an attendee. they had, there was a whole thing where the cell phones are being stolen and they had tried track down who was taking them. they turned to the find my
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iphone app. they were able to follow him and the security officers were able to detain him. he had more than 100 cell phones in his backpack. he was arrested. grand theft and possession of stolen property. >> kimberly: what does that tell you? don't smoke pot at coachella and put your phone down. >> eric: have you been to coachella, k.g.? bob, you're up. he >> bob: of you heard candidate trump say this thousas of times during his campaign. >> going to build the wall, don't even think about it. who is going to pay for the wall? who? >> méxico! >> 100% right. >> bob: 100% wrong, mr. president. the mexicans refused to pay for
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the wall. you have asked congress for $1.5 billion to start the wall. that hasn't happened. in the $12 billion you claimed your beautiful wall would cost is now 22 billion according to the department of homeland security. my comment yesterday about the lobbyists running your wet house. you said you would drain the swamp, mr. president, not stockett. >> greg: i didn't know that "one more thing" is now a political monologue. ♪ you know what gets my goat? sweaters on goats. i call these the porky pigs because they are not wearing pants. when you play king of the mountain, you're going to wear nothing but my sweaters. oh, he knocked him off. >> eric: you guys have a lot
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of -- >> greg: i tried to come up with a new one every week. >> eric: never miss an episode of this show. set your dvr, download our podcast. "special report" is next. >> bret: this is a fox news alert. i am bret baier in washington. a government in fresno, california, kills three this afternoon in a shooting rampage reportedly yells although auch barr as police taken down and then tells police he hates white people. police say the suspect, has a history of criminal activity. let's get to this breaking story. night from jonathan hunt. >> bret, it happened on the streets of downtown fresno. three people killed. the v

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