tv The Five FOX News September 12, 2017 12:00am-1:00am PDT
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>> kimberly: i'm kimberly guilfoyle along with jesse waters, greg gull field, juan williams and dana perino, this is "the five". a fox news weather alert. hurricane irma is now a tropical storm but not stopping it from continuing to wreak havoc on the southeast. the storm battered florida yesterday first landing in the florida keys as a category 4 storm before slowly making its way northward. over 12 million people are still without power and over 1 million people in georgia also have no electricity today. for more on the story let's go to steve harrigan live in naples, florida. steve. >> kimberly, giant trees like this were pulled out from their
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roots by wind gusts up to 142 miles an hour yesterday afternoon in naples. it has been tough going for the people here. no electricity, a very dark, quiet area. they've been trying to make their way through the streets, downed power lines and trees, rescue crews are trying to clear the streets. a lot of neighborhoods still flooded. 12 inches of rain during the storm as well. the promised storm surge that people were afraid of that could be 10 to 15 feet come up suddenly and kill people. that simply did not materialize. the back end of the storm just too weak to make it happen. there are roofs down and trees down and power lines down, some serious destruction, not devastating destruction and most important, no lives lost in the storm in naples. the big challenge now is electricity. more than 200,000 people without it. no a.c. a lot of schools damaged as well. a lot of families will be having some tough times over the next few days as we wait to get back to normal here in
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naples. >> kimberly: we turn to rick levanthal in daytona beach. >> the storm dumped 8 to 12 inches of rain here in a short period of time flooding countless streets and neighborhoods like this one and knocking down trees and power lines leaving hundreds of thousands of people in the dark in in county alone. some of the locals in the neighborhood a few miles from us say it was a twister, tornado that did a worst damage in this storm roaring through at 9:30 last night, ripping raops off houses and dropping them in neighbor's yards and in the middle of the city. we talked to folks hunkered down in the masonic lodge nearby. the storm ripped the brand-new roof off the structure and had people thinking the end could be near. >> sitting playing cards. the lights flickered three
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times and went dead silent and all of a sudden it sounded like a bomb going off. he did two tours in vietnam, three. i said how close was that to vietnam last night and he says it ain't going to get no closer than that. >> there is a county-wide curfew in effect because of tall debris in the road and 150 traffic lights knocked out and cleanup will take some time. we shot some additional video on a 360* camera and you can log onto the fox news facebook page at facebook.com/fox news and see that and more. the situation here not great tonight. a lot of work. >> kimberly: mike tobin is live in tampa. >> it never got as bad as people feared. the biggest difficult like some
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other area is power outages. more than half the population is without power. the primary cause is debris, trees hitting power lines, crews were staged out of harm's way but that meant they spent today driving. work starts tomorrow. some communities are talking about weeks until the power comes back on. tampa electric is saying it will be a matter of days. the primary source of damage out here flooding and downed trees. leslie wilson never doubted the tree in her front yard until it crashed through the roof last night and trashed her husband's car. she is glad no one was hurt. the steeple of this church came off during the worst of the storm last night. the pastor thanks god that no one was hurt in this. the new hole in the roof you can see all the way to heaven. >> kimberly: thank you for the jum -- update.
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you see the devastation. the family members and loved ones, children, their homes, everything that they know and love that it was just really minute by minute trying to get the updates. let's take you around the table and discuss some reflections. greg. >> greg: one positive thing when you see this the power of decentralized government. one of the largest evacuations you've ever seen and the rest of the country rolls out. the bottom up descent ral ietzed country. everything else is okay. it would be total paralysis in a socialist country. we know how to deal with these things. we can run our governments and military and capitalism while something like this is happens. i'm not going to miss all the weathermen competing for who can stay outside the longest. it's an unspeakable truth it looks like fun. when you were a kid and there was a storm, you wanted to be
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outside and so you are watching this and they're telling us to stay inside, stay out of harm's way yet you turned on every channel and there is a guy looks like he is doing leg splits or he is stretching his cavs and leaning in like this and i'm just watching going like i get it. i get it. this is like -- if i were a kid i would go maybe i will go outside. >> kimberly: you want them to send you next time? >> greg: it looks like fun but i don't know if that's the message you want to send. >> dana: the think rick scott and the mayor demanding the evacuation early so people had enough time to get out was smart. they had a little problem with the storm going -- they thought it would go up the east coast and ended up going west. they all tried to get north after that. it looks like aside from the debris. it will be tough to deal with and heartbreaking for a lot of people when they realize their
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possessions have to be replaced but i do think local government did a very good job and smart to demand it and i also saw today they were cautioning people not to try to return home too quickly because there are no power and no sewer. so we know that gutfeld would definitely want to go back home in that. we did not have reporters for this show in two places that were really hit hard and maybe didn't expect it to be as bad. that is in jacksonville, florida and also incredible flooding in charleston, south carolina which is sort of used to it but it is so beautiful and historic it is a shame it has to keep going through it. >> kimberly: it shows the unpredictability of mother nature. you try to anticipate and prepare and it's one of the ways you prevent the damage that can happen to people's homes or the loss of life and trying to anticipate and try to out think the storm. but we've seen with the way this has changed in its path,
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pattern and trajectory and other places we weren't able to show tonight that got hit hard that weren't anticipating of it. >> jesse: you have a lot of naysayers who are looking at the tv oh, it start -- started as a cat 5. we heard about the catastrophic impact it would have. people see flooding and the weathermen over hyped it and media over sold it. that's not true. you want to over hype it. if you do believe the stats show it will be catastrophic and look, even if it wasn't armageddon there is horrible flooding and the keys are totally devastated and jacksonville is not out of the woods yet. there is a human tragedy still unfolding that people shouldn't be too flip with. we heard the sound bite of the guy saying he did three tours in vietnam and close to vietnam. weather is war sometimes. the impact is very similar.
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there is a similar human toll, a similar physical toll. it takes on the environment and when governors like scott or governor abbott prepare for something like this, in a way you are preparing for war because it is so unpredictable. you want to make sure you have all the men, all the assets in the right place because anything can happen and it looks like the contingency plan of the governor was perfect. i'm not saying there weren't mistakes made but he erred on the side of caution and he think he saved a lot of lives. the cleanup starts and it will cost a lot of money. >> kimberly: it is not just the hurricane. you have the winds to contend with, the record flooding in jacksonville and also in charleston. a tremendous amount of damage comes, juan, when you have that kind of heavy wind ripping things apart and the water. you just really are always constantly reminded of the strength and power of the flow of water that comes down from these surges.
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>> juan: most people today are giving thanks to god it wasn't worse. the sense was this was going to be a devastating storm and wipe out things. if you're in miami that's not the case. the surge did not appear and the surge is what was held the potential to take people off the streets and to damage people and property in ways that we can't anticipate because we haven't seen something like that. i think that one of the things that is important to note here is that there is real damage and real lives lost in the caribbean in much higher numbers where the storm hit earlier. places like st. maarten's and wiped away and you go to some of these lesser antilles and damage just unbelievable kinds of damage that will impact them as we head towards the holiday season when they make their money. you come up the u.s. east coast and again it is not over because what i'm hearing is it
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>> joe: josh ravin on. >> orel: coming into the year, you thought really had a chance to make a huge impact on the dodger bullpen. it's been an up and down year and hasn't had as many innings at the big league level as he would like. 15 and a third with the e.r.a. just a tick over 4 but the potential is there.
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but it's more than that, a lesson that teaches you how to deal with all challenges. how does an amazing selfless act 16 years ago help you now? what if you thought about their heroic response to terror in times when you are experiencing hardship? look, i'm not saying that foiling a hijacking and saving thousands of lives, maybe even the president's, is like breaking a leg or getting food poisoning but that's the point. it relegates all challenges to their appropriate place in the universe and then on top of it, it gives you a model response for all of them. let's roll. it's the perfect mindset against fear and pain and it works anywhere. it is a fact you can't hold more than one thought in your head. go ahead and try to pay attention to two thoughts right now. you can't do it. when you are faced with a stressful event, we fill our heads with just one thing and that's fear. it is in charge. but it shouldn't be. they should. so when you are faced with something daunting, what if you
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simply thought about the passengers of flight 93? don't rely on yourself for inspiration, go to them. thinking like 93 obliterates the prison of your ego. you get over yourself. 9/11 isn't about never forgetting, it's about using it to forget yourself. turning their powerful act into a powerful tool to grab when times are tough for you. let the souls of flight 93 help you. their assistance is eternal, their gift to you. lord knows we could use it. it sounds really shallow maybe, dana but when i'm anxious i think about that. >> dana: i don't think it's shallow at all. it is smart. last september i got to go to shanksville and i hadn't had a chance before even when i worked for the president and it was very emotional. i can understand why -- there it is, why vice president pence choked up today. i imagine that he had probably just gone through the exhibit and in the exhibit you have the
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opportunity to pick up the phone receiver and listen to several of the phone calls from passengers on that flight and how remarkable they were. they voted. there was chaos and there was -- but they took a vote and which is probably the absolutely most american thing that you can do. and let's roll, as you said it reminded me of my favorite bible verse, it is fear not. your message is very good about how on 9/11 it is like that's the longest day ever. a day that never ends. there is before 9/11 and after 9/11. after 9/11 you have something like the passengers of flight 93 to give you a sense of bravery and courage. >> greg: kimberly, it is not to diminish any other acts of heroism that day. i feel there is a message here about a mindset of knowing you are doomed and you are going go and fight and you know you'll do good. >> kimberly: to me it's so
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symbolic of the american dream and fighting for what you believe in and solidarity, coming together, being fearless in the face of evil and adversity and deciding to come together for the greater good, for the possibility to save lives and untold even further tragedy than one experienced by this country by people being brave and sacrificing themselves. really, there is no greater sacrifice. there is no greater honor or commitment that you could make to your country and to people that you don't even know but you share a common bond and unity as americans and people that love and cherish this country and said listen, we'll take ownership of this and not let them have their way. god bless them. it's very touching. >> greg: juan, do you worry it's been 16 years and with time it just wears away memory? people move on, they don't think it because we haven't had anything that devastating? we've let our guards down?
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>> juan: i remember being struck by the period right after 9/11, it was 16 years ago, greg, no matter where you went there were flags red, white and blue and people were so proud to be an american. people did not hesitate to say, you know what? i know which side i'm on. i'm standing with the americans here and you saw that globally in addition. and today by contrast 16 years later it is not simply there are so many young people who really don't remember, it's that even among us as the adults in the room, there is so much division and so much of the kind of constantly harping at each other and maybe this goes back to, you know, focusing on things that are small but nonetheless give you the opportunity to skewer somebody or stick your finger and say you are an idiot. as opposed to saying wait a second, i know what counts. for anybody who has ever been overseas, for all the back and forth that we have as americans, you go overseas and
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there is no question you are an american. people see you as an american, you feel it, you miss home, all the stuff that we take for granted. and on that day i remember, you know, being in d.c. and remember being in fear because people were worried as the vice president was saying not only about the plane we heard that was headed towards the capitol but that there were subsequent attacks then planned for the state department and for other areas. and my son was in a school right across from the pentagon, president trump today spoke about a policeman at the pentagon who rushed in and saved 20 people. this to me is america at its best in terms of their response. what came afterwards, arguments about the war, the patriot act, all that, even that to me is important but i do lament the idea that 16 years later some of us can't even talk. that's crazy. we're americans. >> greg: jesse, last words. whatever you want. >> jesse: flight 93 makes me proud to be an american to
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learn your plane is a weapon on a suicide mission but islamic kamikazes and do hand-to-hand combat with guys with box cutters and it's incredible. the first time the enemy really saw the bravery but it wasn't the last. there were a lot of heroes that night or that day and it was because they were united on united flight 93. it wasn't just one single person that went and took the plane down. it was people that united from all races and creeds and colors to take the plane down because the terrorists don't care if you are black or white or whatever. you are an american. and they don't discriminate. so the terrorists only see us versus them and i think we need to rise up and say you know what? we'll unite and do this. we're so divided right now because politicians and the press prey on these divisions in order to exploit hatred for money or ratings.
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you have the antifa versus the nazis, men versus women, black lives matter versus police and we've lost a lot of unity in this country. i think after 9/11 it kind of subsided but now you have the hurricanes coming back around the same time as this anniversary and it gives us an opportunity to say you know, we're all americans. let's find that solidarity again and try to preserve it. there will be more storms and more wars that we'll face together. >> greg: all right. up next you won't believe who hillary clinton is blaming now. i think she is running out of people. we'll be right back.
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blame an entire race for her defeat. >> he was quite successful in referencing a nostalgia that would give hope, comfort, settle grievances for millions of people who were upset about gains that were made by others. >> what you're saying is millions of white people? >> yeah, millions of white people. >> jesse: hillary lost because of white voters but yet obama won twice. how does that make sense? >> dana: that was a longer interview. another headline out of it for me was she said she will never be a candidate again. we can put that to bed. she said so. also just in terms of book sales which we sometimes pay attention to at this network for ourselves. her pre-orders have already surpassed bruce springsteen's. she'll probably hit a million
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books before it goes on sale tomorrow and getting decent reviews for being pretty well written and open and candid. i would disagree with several things including there is something in there about that the democratic party should have a litmus test for abortion which i think is something that if you were paying attention a couple months ago, the democrats were having a big internal feud about that and so i think that the party will be glad when she has got this book tour behind her and they can move on. i think she is feeling disappointment, grief, guilt and some shame and then she talks also how she was doing yoga and alternate nostril breathing in order to calm herself down. >> greg: who cares about her feelings? it's a non-stop monologue of failure. you know what i can't wait? this is a perfect broadway play. this is like -- this will be all these -- what happened is everything will be a segment on blame. she is like a t-shirt cannon that is shooting out you are to
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blame, you are to blame. she blamed the electoral college. every president that has faced the electoral college since 1789 and she is saying that's not fair. i don't want -- i love it. my favorite part of the book is when she said she had purchased a second house next door to her house in chappaqua for the white house staff during vacations. what an arrogant. is that where bill is going to sleep? >> kimberly: she blames him, too, right? you really don't want me to be president. >> jesse: atlanta falcons had a lead in the super bowl and they lost. this is like the quarterback for the falcons wrote a book about why he lost and blamed his uniforms, the crowd, the refs, the defense, the coach, the ball, the turf.
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anything under the sun. would anybody want to hear that? >> kimberly: look, you shouldn't blow a lead like that. if you blame it on -- be like tom brady. you can't count the guy out. this is the thing. so that's what happens and hillary got out played by donald trump. there is a whole lot of reasons why she wasn't able to prevail and it's true, they all thought she would win, including president obama. you got this, no problem. you know, the realtor over there in chappaqua was no problem. let's get the house to put up your white house staff and all the secret service. that didn't turn out to be the case. so, you know, it's a lesson to everybody. do i think she could have pulled it off? yeah. she was a completely different person and had a different campaign and showed up in face and that man president obama went to and campaigned
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vigorously. do i think it is helping her blaming white people? no. >> greg: she will make a lot of money. >> kimberly: blaming deplorables. i think the democratic party has had enough of her. in california they'll change the presidential primary. that will help whoever has california. they're making a big move for that. >> jesse: she is blaming russia because they bought $100,000 in ads on facebook that were mean to hillary. i found out this. she spent $141 million in ads and she is complaining about $100,000 that russia bought on facebook? >> juan: the idea is it's one specific buy that facebook wasn't owning up to until they admitted it to congress recently. clearly there was a kind advertising being done by
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russians or whatever. this is not the kind of book i read even though i love politics but i'm actually interested in hearing politicians who maybe feel like you know what? i can say it because most of my party agrees with me. most democrats agree that it's jim comey, it's the russians, that all of these things and, in fact, playing to racial antipathy helped donald trump. she is not saying something that most democrats are saying. >> kimberly: i don't think -- you were critical of the clinton foundation. >> juan: when i hear her say in this book, she writes that you know what? people wanted to hear that i understood their pain coming out of the financial meltdown and crisis and what is going on. and instead i was busy, like i think of this as like husbands talking to wives. i was busy saying i know how to deal with this. i have the answers for this and
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people didn't want my answers. people wanted somebody who reflected their discomfort, their pain, their desire to be in donald trump's mode the great disrupter in terms of government that they didn't think was responsive to their needs. >> greg: they wanted a human being and she wasn't a human being. she was as far as being human as humanly impossible can be. >> juan: lots of politicians are not human. they play the poll game. they say what they are supposed to say. exactly. to hear her -- i think her voice comes through in this book, you do hear her saying this is my reflection as to why she lost. and on the race thing, come on. you said that obama -- obama didn't win white folks the second time. >> jesse: i don't think he won either time but he won the white house twice. >> greg: a lot voted for trump, right? >> juan: there is an interesting especially in the swing states. but to sit here and say race
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in political history. >> that probably be too bombastic even for me but maybe modern political history. >> the firing of james comey was the biggest mistake in modern political history. >> if you're saying that's associated with me i'll leave it at that. >> dana: that was a lesson if you do media training, people in p.r. that was a good one to look at. he knew he probably said something similar but today kimberly, kellyanne conway said steve bannon speaks for himself and sarah huckabee sanders defended the comey firing and suggested that he gave false testimony and leaked privileged information to journalists. that was another way to turn the tables on this story. >> kimberly: all that could be true. it could be true, right? that's why there is an investigation to see whether or not he gave factual information or perjured himself, what he knew when he knew it and
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whether he told the truth about it when questioned. number two, the information i had at the time that he did feel it was a big mistake that the president went ahead and dismissed comey in the way that he did and the timing of it because he thought it would have a political backlash against the president. it did prove to be a firestorm but i think it was also part of what was going on in the white house between what jared and others thought and what bannon thought. the story is not written yet in terms of what the outcome and what did comey actually know and do. that's what's very interesting from a legal perspective to get to the bottom of that. there are some serious questions. >> dana: steve bannon has a point it could turn out to be a bad decision. when it was comey, the only thing you could investigate was collusion. firing comey adds the attempts to interfere and obstruction of justice and you get the other stuff and it starts to balloon. >> jesse: it worries me if that's what steve bannon thinks.
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maybe he knows something about the investigation and thinks it is going in a direction it shouldn't be going. >> dana: i don't think he knows anything. >> jesse: i think he could possibly smell where it's going. i could think of some bigger political mistakes in recent memory. nominating hillary clinton, obamacare, wmds, lewinsky, watergate break-in. >> dana: maybe he was defining modern. >> jesse: a great nugget. mitch mcconnell wants trump to stop saying drain the swamp. that's great. christie didn't get a cabinet position because he didn't show up for the plane after the access hollywood tape leaked. i think the way he pulled the charlie rose, too, was phenomenal. he didn't let rose get a word in edge wise and at one point
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who rose accused him of being racist i don't need -- >> dana: i think media training professionals should watch that. steve bannon himself did a good job. i don't know about the interviewer. your thoughts on the interview? >> greg: . who had the biggest impact in modern political history? andrew breitbart. when i look at this and see nobody knew who steve bannon was four years ago. some people did. we knew him but america didn't know him. andrew breitbart gave america steve bannon. steve bannon gave america a donald trump win. so it all kind of goes back. i think the biggest political story that hasn't been reported was the prankster named andrew breitbart. >> juan: i was taken by the idea that bannon is saying that
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people like gary cohn should quit. if you can't stand with trump after charlottesville you should quit. he would then apply the same to rex tillerson who said the president speaks for himself. but i think that what -- you know, when you put this together, i go to with what jesse said. what bannon sees is this is a great political mistake because of what is likely to come. there is something to the investigation. otherwise -- >> jesse: potentially. >> juan: there is no reason for him that this is the biggest political mistake in terms of watergate and the like. this to me is really kind of -- you know, looking inside. also the second thing is that he is willing to attack people in the administration. even in the interview with charlie rose he going after people he used to work with. i'm not sure he is being self-a grandized and making himself a
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bigger player than he is because he wants to keep the audience. >> jesse: obama had a lot of wing men on the outside, cbs, abc, nbc comes to mind. trump has one guy and that's at breitbart. >> dana: why do you put trump down like that? where is your self-confidence? directly ahead more climate change mania. we'll show it to you next.
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>> juan: the devastations is challenging the trump administration on climate change after the two hurricanes. >> when you see three category 4 hurricanes on the same map at the same time does the thought occur to you geez, you know, maybe there is something to this climate change thing and its connection to powerful hurricanes? can you separate the two and say boy these are a lot of hurricanes coming our way. >> there is a cyclical nature to a lot of these hurricane seasons. >> juan: this is an interesting
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moment because i think there are people out there who would say what better time to talk about climate change than right now when everybody sees there are these very big storms. but you have people, greg, who say no. >> greg: what you saw there is jim acosta is anti-science. he looked at anecdotal evidence instead of large samples of data. scientists do that and they come to conclusions. they're never 100% sure. what he said. he does what we get criticized for. look out the window. look what is happening. weather is changing. that's how it works. you have to look at large samples of data. you look stupid there, jim. landfalling hurricanes have been decreasing as co2 and carbon goes out. it's kind of a contradiction. maybe there is science we need to look at. right there anecdoteal evidence
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you look dumb. >> juan: it looked like he was trying to force an argument. >> dana: he wanted to -- what was your question? >> juan: i was going to say to you, though, to be respectful of jim acosta the scientists say you have warmer waters, that makes for more intense hurricanes. is there -- can you fairly as a reporter say there is a correlation between the hurricane and climate change? >> dana: i know last week greg spent time going through all the data so we don't have to. what greg said is a hate fact when it comes to climate change believers. i'm not saying it isn't happening. i believe it is. the conversation needs to change to what can we do about it? the answer is not a lot. how to mitigate it and adapt so people will be more prepared. building codes, smarter evacuation. that's what we've been talking about for a while and it gets
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glossed over. >> juan: how would you respond to what dana said? i think epa. weather service need to be thinking about climate change right now. >> jesse: liberalism is about guilt, juan. liberals don't like america because they think it is a flawed nation and they believe that capitalism contributes to climate change and climate change makes hurricanes worse. therefore, they feel like they're being punished for their success because of capitalism. their solution is i'm going to be the priest of global warming religion and i will control everyone else's life. i'll tell you what to drive, how to eat, how to live and i'll be your savior. like the tribes in ancient times when there is an eclipse they say oh my gosh, we have to sacrifice a virgin or floods, oh my gosh, burn the crops. the water god is angry, what do
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we do? you know what the answer always is? we'll control your life. >> kimberly: i thought we jumped into like water's world for a second there that's so crazy. >> juan: i'm safe. i'm afraid he will sacrifice me. >> kimberly: i wouldn't turn your back on him if i were you. i don't know if your friends are safe this way, either. >> juan: i have reverend jesse here. what do you think of acosta's behavior and the climate change? >> kimberly: it's looking at. jim acosta has become the personality of the newsroom. he is in the middle of every story. and he has been parodied on "saturday night live", the whole thing. and so now i think, though, he is bringing this up. it seems politically opportunistic and a little dishonest. these weren't record setting. he is trying to glob them all
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together when the statistics don't support his argument. >> juan: it is interesting because to me i listen to all these ministers who say america is being punished. i'm more interested in climate change than hell and dam nation. >> jesse: it's the same thing. >> dana: jennifer lawrence said we're being punished by the hurricanes for electing donald trump. >> juan: we have a special moment coming up. moment coming up. please whoooo. i enjoy the fresher things in life. fresh towels. fresh soaps. and of course, tripadvisor's freshest, lowest... ...prices. so if you're anything like me... ...you'll want to check tripadvisor. we now instantly compare prices... ...from over 200 booking sites... ...to find you the lowest price... ...on the hotel you want. go on, try something fresh. tripadvisor. the latest reviews. the lowest prices.
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>> kimberly: welcome back to "the five". we have difficult news to report to you now. a former member of the "the five" logs one of his loved one this weekend. eric bolling and his wife. eric chase passed away friday in colorado where he was attending college. he had just started his sophomore year and he was only 19 years old. it's not clear yet how he passed and an autopsy will be performed next week. in a post on twitter eric said he and adrian are overwhelmed by the love and support that they have been receiving and they ask that you please keep them in your prayers. they are in our prayers and the prayers of the entire fox news family. eric chase brought so much love and joy to his parents' life. if you watched our show over the years you probably heard eric proudly talk about his sweet son who was a baseball player like his dad, played
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left field. he was an amazing young man. he did so much to help others and he was an a student and excelled in mathematics. we are truly heartbroken and we want to extend our deepest condolences to the bolling family. eric chase, may he rest in eternal peace. want to take a moment to take it around the table to share some of our reflections. >> juan: i know eric, sat next to eric and i did not know eric chase but this i do know, that there is nothing harder than losing a son, a child, and i just wanted to say to eric how much we pray for him and offer him comfort. >> dana: i'm not a parent and one thing that i learned from him was that is the best part of eric. he was so dedicated and i learned a lot about selfless love from him and his son.
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>> greg: i'm still blown away by this news and i think -- if i feel this way i can't the nea trusts for news and information on cable. >> bret: this is a fox news alert. i am bret baier in washington. a tale of two tragedies tonight on this september 11th, 2017. we are experiencing at the tragedy of nature as hurricane irma devastates florida and we are remembering september 11, 2001, a tragedy that was man-made as terrorists attacked new york city and the pentagon and went down in a plane crashed in pennsylvania. we will have complete coverage of both stories plus an exclusive interview with the ca director mike pompeo on the terrorist threat today. we begin in florida where millions are without power. tens of thousands are in shelters, and some people who did not leave
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