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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  September 25, 2017 8:00pm-9:00pm PDT

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thanks for watching the debut of "fox news tonight." we will be back here tomorrow at 10:00 p.m. with those election results. good night, everybody. ♪ >> tucker: well, good evening and welcome to "tucker carlson tonight." football isn't just the most popular sport in this country, it is also one muchch the only institutions we have left that unites everybody here across race and income and geography. there are not many of those, no matter who they voted for last fall, americans who love the same team can bond over football. no longer possible, sadly. now even the country's final nonpartisan refuge has been invaded by politics. on saturday, the president tweeted that nfl players who protest the national anthem ought to be fired and as if on cue, the protests intensified. in london, players for the baltimore ravens and the jacksonville jaguars kneeled
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in contempt of the star-spangled banner whilele standing respectfully for god save the queen. in chicago the entire pittsburgh steelers team stayed off the field for the anthem save for a single player, an army veteran who defied his own coach by walking out. his jersey by the way is the single most popular football related piece of paraphernalia on the internet right now. in washington, d.c. last night, virtually everytete player on the raiders sat in protest as military army guard carried an american flag on the field. the site of pampered millionaires giving the finger to the country that them very rich. players have a first amendment right to criticize their country. of course, nobody really contests that free speeche lectures are a little hardre to take from the very people who shut down the political speech of their
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opponents. not the point. the constitution protectsre your right to scream obscenities at nuns, doesn't prevent the rest of us from judging you for doing it. what are these protests really about? some claim their core complaint is police brutality. protest that. learn the facts. make your case. propose solutions. run for office. try to make the country better. but, no. that's too hard. it's easier to follow the demagogues and attack america itself. you win plaudits for bravery on instagram. why is it a big deal?y why is it in the end dangerous for this country? for the same reason we sing the national anthem in the first place so often stand for the flag, say pledge of allegiance those traditions liberals despised and sneered at. why are they important?
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because in the end, love of country is all we have. we aren't like other nations shared belief in america, the country, is the only glue that binds us together. why are vermont and mississippi in the same country? because people in both places love america. what happens when they no longer do? many have accused the president of using the flagpr controversy as a diversion for more pressing topics like the threat of north korea or failure of healthcare initiative and as a political matter, that may be true. but it does not change the inherent significance of what you just watched lastst night at the game.t because, when our elites attack our national symbols as if they are worthless and loathsome, something important, something monumental have changed here.e if the people who benefited most from america despise it and increasingly they do, where does that leave the rest of us? burgess owens is a former nfl player, the reverend michael faulkner is a candidate for new york comptroller. both of them once played for the new york jets and both situated to comment on this both join us tonight. reverend, i want to go to you first.
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and ask if you understand why this is all a little hard to take. nobody can contest the first amendment right of these players to do what they have done. to watch the most celebratedra pampered people in america attack not police brutality but the country itself, cann you see why people find that so very disgusting? >> you know, they don't knowy how to express their anger. and, you know, and i push back a little bit, tucker, on the richest, most pampered, because they have had to go through a journey to get where they are.e. so they have gone through some things to get where they are. they are not pampered. they weren't born of means, many of them were born into low income families, et cetera. they have gotten where they have gotten because of talent and god-given ability. >> tucker: hold on.en isn't that the whole point? you are right, of course. what you said is totally true. isn't that the whole point? in america, people from a low station can wind up being some of the most richest and pampered people in the country, as they are. >> absolutely. listen, as an american, i
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have a responsibility to challenge power, to challenge authority. however, we're talking now about the setting of it. the setting for an nfl football game and the stars of the game kneeling down before the game is not the proper setting for them to express their political angst and their opposition to what is going on outside of, you know, in the inner cities. >> tucker: right. >> it just takes away the political angst and it's offensive. and to be honest with you, i think we ought to talk about i having that conversation, talking about giving them an opportunity to do something different, because not standing for the national anthem certainly wouldn't be something i would do. >> tucker: right. these guys have plenty of -- look, they can say -- everylo word is recorded by dutiful scribes in the sports press. i burgess owens, i'm wondering why the united states government should be
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subsidizing this. if these guys hate the government. a lot of the stadiums they play in, the majority are funded by taxpayers. a the pentagon spends hundreds of millions a year t advertising at nfl stadiums and on broadcasts. why should they do this? if these guys hate america why are taxpayers picking up a lot of the tab? >> i don't think they should be. i think the free market is going to take care of that in itself. my concern with this whole process is what the flag stands for. when i stood on the sideline i remembered getting teary eyed. i was so excited, so proud to be part of the process. i also grew up in a time where 70% of black men were mentors to us. in the home, when the things they need to do, teaching us this country is the greatest play to be an and growing. we have come to the point because of liberalism. the democratic policies 70% of black men do not stay around. they don't have the parents and the fathers to tell them what they should be proud of and how they should stand up for this process.
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this is not a void. we are dealing with an ideology that first of all d bans god, has destroyed the black family in the 1970s which we led the country in terms of the strength of our family unit. they have destroyed our history. no one even knows about how strong the black americanhi history was.bo and now they want to take away our pride in our country. i think it's too far. this is one thing as americans we might disagree. mike and i might disagree on what they can do on the field.th at the end of the day, we love our country and we're going to make sure we stand against those who take away the hope of our kids. that's what these liberals are doing. >> tucker: i think that's right. michel faulkner, isn't this the whole point?ng these are people revered by kids and by lots of americans and shouldn't they be, look, america is flawed. nobody argues that it is not. but that the whole enterprise is illegitimate and disgusting which is what they are saying and the american flag is a symbol of contempt. shouldn't they be telling us the opposite?
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>> taking a knee, they don't get a chance to talk about their issue. first of all, they need to get up and do somethingghe about it. not just protest but need to get up and need to be partt of the national conversation to make america better. to make their communities better, to take their responsibilities just like burgess was talking about. but, secondly, you know, i thought about it after i looked at, again, what pittsburgh did. maybe we should not allow they can stand in honor of the flag and the national anthem. maybe they should not be -- maybe they should bebe restricted from the field unless they plan to honor the flag and honor the national anthem as all the fans do in the stands. >> tucker: that's a great suggestion. by the way, burgess, isn't that consistent with the waysu the nfl operates? if you want to wear orange socks on a team with white socks, you can't. the owner of the team says you can't. why don't they here? s >> let's take it a step further. the nfl corporate office in new york city. how about employees during
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lunchtime decided they wanted to demonstrate comerk back and find out their desks would be vacated. this is what is happening. liberals at the top, elitists they are using my race, they are bringing misery to my race and then using this misery to make sure they keep their power. we need to make sure number one, two things. we need to make sure that we're standing against t corporate elitists, liberal elitists like the nfl.i boycotting every single team that does this. i also have black conservatives get into the black community and let them see what the democratic party has for years done to them. it's not a black or white american problem. it's a democratic, elitist problem. >> tucker: you need to run for something so i can vote for you. we are out of time. thank you very both. we're out of time. >> thank you, appreciate it, >> everything in america about politics. no surprise thatin jim acosta wildly
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speculating that donald trump doesn't really care about the flag and national anthem and our civic symbols instead he is just a racist. watch.ls >> there is an unmistakable racial element to this storyry and that's why i come down on the side of covering this and covering it big. awkward subtext is a question we asked a few t weeks ago on this program. is president trump a racist? >> why is it that the president was seeming to go after african-american athletes over the weekend.r he went after collin kaepernick at that rally in alabama friday night. tom brady did not make it here to the white house this the new england patriotsot made it. there were no angry tweets directed at tom brady or other athletes. i don't think it's a stretch to say that it's a bit of a dog whistle that is being played out there. >> tucker: the larger question is how did jim acosta wind up on television. meantime, smaller questions with joe concha who writes about the media for the hill. he joins us tonight. if you are a reporter you ought not be speculating about people's motives because aren't they
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fundamentally unknowable? how could jim acosta know what president trump means? >> can i answer osmosis on that? you can look at all of president trump's tweets on this topic and it's all out there. race is not broached once. he has also verbally talked about this as well. you don't see race broached anywhere. since we have, again, reporters and pundits that last month were playingd mental health officials when it comes to analyzing the president's sanity, now apparently we are reading minds as well as far as that goes. just to answer mr. acostat when he said why weren't there any angry tweets at tom brady when he didn't show up at the white house for that celebration, brady's mother has cancer. and tom wanted to spend time with her at that time. that's why he couldn't go and that's why the president didn't respond, but jim acosta doesn't report that. >> tucker: by the way, i was at the redskins game last night and watched the raiders kneel for the national anthem and a bunch of them were white. i think the league is overwhelmingly like 70%nk african-american players. is any attack on the nfl
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a racial attack?ca is that what they are saying? >> there tends to be this tick with our political media that all the time we insert a racial component to stories that don't warrant them whatsoever. let me give you another example with another story. brian fallon is a former press secretary or spokesperson for hillary clinton. he is now a political analyst for cnn. and he tweeted and i asked your producers to put this up because i want to make this an educational experience. this is what brian fallon tweeted out today. "president trump's racist neglect of puerto rico is threatening lives.pr it's time to start carrying -- caring about the crisis there." that's what we are dealing with now. that when a hurricane hits a u.s. territory and we responded, i think, pretty well like we did with harvey and irma, it's racism working its way into this. you were at that redskins game last night. good thing you watched because not a lot of people did, tucker, that was lowest rated week three nbc sunday night telecast since 2006. that's when you know that
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this isn't just well, you know, some people are boycotting. no, this is a real problemem for the nfl right now if those are the numbers that we are seeing. >> tucker: i think this is t correct. i may be wrong but i think it's right. i the teams with the mostt players protesting the national anthem and the flag were more likely to lose last night than to win. >> that's an interesting -- yeah, i can't comment on that. i didn't research that but, i do know that the nfl, tucker, is awfully hypocritical here when it comes to free speech. now, you may remember last year that horrible situation in dallas where a sniper took out five dallas police officers. >> tucker: yes, i remember well. >> and wounded several. the dallas cowboys wanted to wear a little decal on their helmets to honor the dallass police department with thehe dallas police department logo. the nfl said no, you can't do that. when d'angelo williams, running back wanted to wear pink cleats for the entire season wanted to honor his mother because she died of breast cancer. no, you can only do that when we are running our campaign in october. when avery williamson wanted
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to wear 9/11 cleats. nfl said no you can't nfl the nfl seems to be picking and choosing what kind of free speech can you have and when. overall i talked to a lot of people yesterday. i was out and about. just conversations. the sentiment on the ground is that people agree with the president on this one. they don't necessarily agree with the way he presented himself. instead of saying sons of bitches and so on. completely contrast what is we saw in the media bubble. not just on cable news. espn. b universal condemnation of trump. this is like the 2016 election. the conditions on the ground what people feel is completely different than what people are thinking in new york and washington. >> tucker: that's always the case.. they don't actually care what people outside new york and d c. think. >> only care with what each other think in their bubble. >> tucker: trust me i live here.. he has been holding down the 10:00 p.m. slot for years and makes his triumphant return to 9:00 p.m. we are honored to have the
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great sean hannity join us now. >> sean: i need help. starting my 23rd year on the fox news channel here next week. i have no idea what to do. no idea what to say. there is nothing in the news today. do you have any help? >> tucker: i do actually, i just got word about 60 seconds ago that alejandro villanueva, he was the player, the army veteran three tours. walked out, is now saying that he did so by accident and he haw apologized for embarrassing his team. >> sean: why? he was the hero. this guy is -- he won the bronze star. g this guy served three tours of duty in afghanistan. i saw that. and then i saw his coach attack him after the game. and i'm like, really? really? this guy -- he tells a story about losing some of his platoon mates so inspiring it's amazing. i want to congratulate you. you have been a great friend.zi i'm just praying you give me a great lead-in every night. >> tucker: we're going to try. >> sean: no pressure at all.
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>> tucker: and we have a live handoff i just heard. five second delay has been eliminate so we'll be able to speak at the cusp of 9:00 p.m. every evening.y i'm excited you are back ready to do battle. this is going to be awesome. >> sean: i said this on "the five" today. i never thought i would be the last person standing. if you watch the early days of "hannity & colmes." tucker, it's so bad. i am so bad. it is so humiliating. >> tucker: i was on it in the 1990s, i remember that well. >> sean: you were on in the early days. i feel blessed to be here. it's hard.ayl we lost three quarters of our prime time lineup. have you been a big part in keeping this network strong. our entire lineup, i'm friends with everybody here. i have no -- i just feel very blessed. i will say this, it is so imperative for this country in this time where we have a media institution that is trying to disrupt and destroy this country and destroy this president, delegitimize him, that a there's got to be some other
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voice out there. and, you know, you. >> tucker: you don't think that everybody in the entire media should be singing off the same song sheet? you think there should be some diversity in america'sth media landscape? is that what you are arguing, sean? how dare you. >> sean: i'm saying it. i know media guys are hoping i will fail miserably. >> tucker: they are. >> sean: there are a few cable wars. the best thing that happened to me, i will tell you a quick story, of my entire career.ad in atlanta, my second professional radio job in the early '90s, i went up against a legend, the best, a guy by the name of neal boortz. when i came to new york i went up against bob grant who also was a legend. when i started in cable it was me and alan against larry king, geraldo, and brian williams. i'm used to a good fight. and so i'm really excited -- i have got to tell you one last thing.
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we have two massive, massive things we're going to say on the air tonight about upcoming guests. >> tucker: what are they? >> sean: getting used to say tune in at 9:00. >> tucker: tease, don't tell. is that what you areonha saying? >> sean: i am saying i love you, tucker, at some point in the next hour it is going>> to be revealed. but you have been amazing the audience has been so loyal. you have filled one of the biggest gaps in cable. i am proud to be a friend and colleague of yours. you are going to die by the end of this next hour.r. >> tucker: producer just said in my ear. >> sean: sound like connie chung and newt gingrich's mom. between you and i. >> tucker: if the rumors are true, it's a big deal.l. i'm not even going to
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speculate about you having a >> sean: so far nobody has it. d >> tucker: i will sit in the studio after it's done with cameraman and watch breathlessly like golden retrievers out the window. >> this is an amazing time. we love our audience. we are going to serve them every night with news and information and hard-hitting opinion. you do great debates that they will not get anywhere else on television. and i never would have thunk it. i'm the last man standing. i will tell you that. t >> tucker: i love it. >> sean: that was not in the prediction papers on october 6, 1996, when i started. >> tucker: i will never forget it. during the dole campaign. 41 minutes from now. >> sean: it's embarrassing. it's so humiliating. >> tucker: congratulations, sean. see you in 40 minutes, man. be sure to tune in 9:00 p.m. sean hannity at a new time slot. up next, we hold these truths to be self-evident that all cubans are created equal. wait, what? we'll tell you about the school in arizona that has taught
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♪ >> tucker: the declaration of independence is justifiably one of the most famous documents in human history. history by the way that it helped change forever. thomas jefferson's immortal words echo through the ages we hold these truths to be self-evident that all men
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are created equal. well, except at salk elementary school in arizona taught that jefferson was a sexist bigot. during a lesson for fourth grade classroom a teacher at that school crossed out the word men and told her students to recite all humans are created equal. professor, why should we care? i sense this is a big deal j rewriting one of our founding documents. tell us why we should care about this. >> well, any time a person tries to change language, it's usually because the reality is unpalatable. in this case, the idea we are supposed to identify by superficial to our character. that's an agenda that nobody really wants to buy into. so whether it's human or
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mankind or overseas contingency operations or man caused disasters in the case of not wanting to talking about islamic terrorism or illegal alien becomes migrant. when you start to see words change their meaning, it's usually on the left not empirical. a message nobody wants to buy into. >> tucker: it's brilliant analysis. what you are saying is that it's propaganda. they are distorting reality in order to change outcomes. >> yeah. and they are also ignorant and classical languages always have two words. one for male and one for male and female that's called mankind. in greek and homo in latin. et cetera, et cetera. when people say mankind, they don't think of testicles. they think of all of us together. everybody knows that. what a waste of time when students are half educated as it is with these studies courses. they should be looking at the essence of the declaration, equality.
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all men are declaredl equal. that was radical thing to say in the 18th century. instead we get caught up on. agenda of some half educated activist, sort of like what we are seeing in the nfl. >> tucker: you said that was radical concept in the 18th century. it was. it's also radical now. i don't think the radical left think everyone is equal. bac hierarchy based on race and sex and sexual orientation. >> they have to because once the agenda of equality of opportunity was largelync achieved, we're humans. we are particular individuals. when we don't quite become equal, even though thehe opportunity is the same for a variety of reasons, the left comes in and says we're going to insist on a quality result.o just give us enough power and money and influence and we'll do it for you. there is no space, tucker, anymore that we can find a refuge from politicization. >> tucker: i know. >> comic books, emmys, oscars,>>
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everything is political because the left is trying to do what it can't do at the ballot box. >> tucker: that's exactly right. >> foundations. >> tucker: the rest of us are in church or sleeping and they never sleep. victor davis hanson thank you as always. great to see you. hillary clinton's latest explanation for herna defeat, women don't recognize all the sexism in the world. up next, i will ask a democratic strategist whether this theory makes her defeat any moreic explicable than the prior explanations did. what exactly does it mean? stay tuned. whoooo.
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be good to your eyes. >> tucker: hillary clinton has found a lot of people to blame for her defeat in the presidential election last fall. james comey, bernie sanders, jill stein.ha those dastardly macedonians and their content farms!rs most people sort of scoff at those explanations so now hillary has a different one. she is accusing women of sexism against themselves. watch this. >> i think it's about the stage that a young woman finds herself at any particular point in time. actually, the research is pretty clear if you are a young college-educated young woman and you starting off in the workforce, you are pretty much at wage parity with your counterpart, a youngff male college graduate. by the end of your 20s, you no longer are. once you decide, if you do, to be married and have a family, you fall even further behind. you don't yet understand
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all of the sort of invisible signals and attitudes that are at work that can hold you back. >> tucker: christy setzer is a democratic strategist, president of new heights communications, and she joins us tonight. christy, it's great to see you. >> it's great to be here. >> tucker: hard to imagine a more patronizing explanation.s hillary clinton loses the majority of married women, women who are out of their 20s. the majority of them. women who have the experience she just described and basically saying you don't understand what it's like to be a woman in america. they do, because they are, and they voted against her. >> i don't think she is patronizing married women. i think she is specifically talking to the bernie supporters in their 20s who didn't support. her. don't get me wrong, i don'ts think it's a good idea to tell people who didn't vote for you that they were wrong. i don't think that's actually an excellent strategy. t but i will say as a woman who is 40 years old that this actually spoke directly to me and my lived experience which
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is, yes, for the early stages of my career, i did believe that i was given every opportunity. i by the time i was in my late 20s i did see the men who had exactly my same level of experience getting tapped for much bigger jobs and very few of the women. so i do think that if you haven't ever experienced that, then you don't actually connect with hillary on that point. you don't necessarily see her as somebody who has had a lot of sexism thrown at her, had a lot of the different challenges thrown at her and she has come out on the other side and is still fighting. >> tucker: i can see it spoke to you, but it didn't speak to the majority of women in your position. because they actually didn't vote for her. that's what i found soy strikin. she described this life progression and when you get to the end of it, you know the truth. the women who got to the end and know the truth are like, "i don't want any more hillary clinton." >> right. >> tucker: what struck me more is that having a female president is substantively different than having a male president and we need one. >> sure. >> tucker: my impression was we were supposed to believe that the differences between men and women are so minuscule
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that can you actually change your sex just by saying so. you don't need surgery. you can say i'm a different sex and we have to agree that you are. because the differences are so small. she is saying the differences are so profound that you'll have a different country if you have a female president. i'm serious. how does it work?at >> you are conflating two different things. >> tucker: no. same thing. gender. >> let's talk about the idea that you want to vote forat somebody who has understood where you are coming from, right? and whether that person is male or female, you want somebody who you think can look at your life and say "i get it. i understand you probably had the same fears, worries, hopes and aspirations that i do." and i think that she iss saying and i believe this. that women have a lot of things in common and often have a lot of the same experiences, hopes, fears,in aspirations, et cetera, in a way frankly that i don't believe that donald trump would understand where e i'm coming from, where i have been, where i would t like to go. u >> tucker: yet, again, the
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majority of 69-year-old grandmothers voted for trump. >> sure. >> tucker: here is my question. what are the specific qualities. >> yes.. >> tucker: that would make a woman a different and better president than a man? and i want to warn you thisak is a mine field of stereotypes here. >> sure, it is. >> tucker: as a liberal have you got to pretend that no generalization is allowable about women. how are you going to answer my question? >> i will answer yourle question by telling you what t my experience has been and what spoke to me about her campaign. there was a moment in which hillary clinton sat there giving testimony on benghazi. it came to be the 13th, 14th hour of her testimony. she had exhausted everyone else in the room. she answered question after question afterry question. she was proving yet againwe that she was smarter than almost everyone there. that she could answer.r. she had not just stamina, and skill and smarts, shee basically faced everyone down. i think women across america in that moment said, "good for
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you. good for you, lady." >> tucker: so she has enormous stamina. i have always thought that about her. she is pretty tough except when she is playing the victim. what was female about this? this is the whole campaign. "i'm a woman." by the way, "i'm a here here." woman, woman. who cares? i don't understand why it's important if men and women are basically the same. >> i don't think men't and women are basically the same.wo i don't think anyone is arguing that. >> tucker: what qualities do women have that men don't have that make them better presidents? >> again, i believe that in the same way that you might believee that african-americans are facing different things each day than white men are experiencing. that it's not too big of a leap to think that women are facing different things each day than men are. say, for example, the universal experience of women. let me finish, please. >> tucker: that's not the argument, right? >> experience of being in a meeting, saying something,>> the point is not heard.
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a man says it and suddenly that's a great idea, right? these are small and subtle things, but very relatable experiences that, you know, if you are a woman and you listen to hillary clinton and you say, "i get it. i have been there." frankly she is going to look out for me in other waysi because she knows what i have been through in this way. >> tucker: i sort of understand that, but again, women didn't feel that way.ha final question, do you think women have better judgment? do you think they are stronger under pressure? like, is there some quality of being a woman that makes you a better president potentially?t because she kept suggesting that. i never figured out what she was talking about. i'm not against a woman president. i'm not arguing that. >> i do.ki i think women are sort of, as in the way that anybody who is not typically in a position of power, women are more self-aware of the dynamics that are at play, right? p women are more aware of, you know, both the ways in whicr women treat men, men treat women. blah, blah, blah, blah. right? i think that that necessarily, particularly in the roles she's
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had as secretary of state, you have to experience diplomacy, understand where other people are coming from. i think that makes her inherently more empathetic. and there were lots of reasons to vote for her. >> tucker: i would say women seem to have a lot of power, certainly in my life. thank you, christy. >> thank you. >> tucker: president trump's travel ban has expanded. saying it is needed to keep the country safe. in response, the mayor of london compared him to isis. nigel farage here to discuss that coming up. it's easy to think that all money managers are pretty much the same. but while some push high commission investment products, fisher investments avoids them. some advisers have hidden and layered fees. fisher investments never does. and while some advisers are happy to earn commissions from you whether you do well or not, fisher investments fees are structured so we do better when you do better. maybe that's why most of our clients come from other money managers. fisher investments. clearly better money management.
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this guy. check it out! self-appendectomy! oh, that's really attached. that's why i rent from national. where i get the control to choose any car in the aisle i want, not some car they choose for me. which makes me one smooth operator. ah! still a little tender. (vo) go national. go like a pro. >> tucker: president trump's travel ban has expanded. an announcement yesterday, the trump administration removed sudan from the list of countries that are restricted while adding chad, northth korea, and venezuela. in response to these new restrictions, the mayor of london, sadiq khan, took theri moderate position that president trump is pretty much like isis. watch. >> because what you are saying is not dissimilar to what daish or isis say. what do they say?
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they say there is a clash of civilizations. it's not possible to be a muslim and a westerner. or the west hates us. and you are inadvertently playing their game.. >> tucker: nigel farage is the former leader of the u.k. independence party. he spent years pointing out the dangers. how did this guy end up being the mayor of london,n, nigel, and is he for real? >> i'm not sure. he has lost the plot. how on earth can you compare trump to isis? isis is a barbarous, murderous regime that inflicts countless misery on as many people as it can. b donald trump, whether you like him or not, and maybe the man doesn't like him, but trump actually is standing up, defending our judeo-christian culture. and he is doing it in the face of extraordinary opposition from judges in america, from people in his own party. but, honestly, i do think sadiq khan, the mayor of london, is, to put it mildly, wide of
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the mark with these comments. they are ludicrous. >> tucker: what does the rest of the u.k. think when they look to london and they see this guy as mayor? i mean, this is the seat of the british empire. this was a really impressive place for hundreds of years and this guy is running it?iv >> yes. i mean, look, let's be frank. he is not particularly high caliber. he has been elected in a city that is now increasingly a labour, left of center city. i mean, do remember that a lot of people in britain are a nervous. a little bit politically correct and scared of saying some things. it's also worth remembering that over the course of his career, sadiq khan himself has made some real mistakes in terms of who he shared a platform with. he shared a platform with someim guys who had islamic views that are pretty unsavory. i honestly think conservative britain looks at what sadiq khan says,
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frankly shakes their head, and examines their shoes. >> tucker: [laughs] that's very british of them. i have to say. so do you see across europeav as you look at what just happened in germany and as you look at what is happening in spain, is the continent coming apart? it looks that way a little bit from here. >> yeah. in many ways, it is. i mean, look, you have heard the story over the course of the last few months, the populist revolt is over.r. macron has won in france. merkel is back in germany. but the truth of it is, what you saw happening in germany yesterday was, for the first time in decades, a party that is unashamedly german. a party that is talking about their own identity, running their own country, deeply skeptical of being run from brussels, getting 90 seats. yesterday is a big day inde germany. and for those who comfort themselves that macron won in france, well, in the firstse round of the french presidential
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election, nearly 50% of candidates voted forea successionists. so the message here is we may not have had the big seismic shocks of brexit and trump that we had in 2016 happening in '17. but believe you me, the momentum, the movement of those that say we don't want to be elected -- run by unelected super national cabals, that is still growing. that is still gathering pace.er and believe me, tucker, in 10 years' time, this european union as you see it today will not exist. >> tucker: that's right. and this entire financed based international order is on its way out. for good or ill. nigel farage, thanks a lot. great to see you tonight. >> thank you. >> tucker: well, recent hurricanes harvey, irma, y maria have killed dozens of americans and many more across the globe. now, global warming activists are saying that skeptics of climate change should be charged with murder for those deaths.
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up next, we'll see what an actual scientist thinks of that proposition. stay tuned. tuned. ♪ what started as a passion... ...has grown into an enterprise. that's why i switched to the spark cash card from capital one. now, i'm earning unlimited 2% cash back on every purchase i make. everything. what's in your wallet?
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♪ ♪ >> tucker: 2017's intense hurricane season has emboldened some climateen activists. in a recent piece for theem "outline" a writer brians. merchant asserted the quote "climate change denial should be a crime. people who disagree should be punished." mark kurtz guard said what he calls climate denial should be punished as "premeditated murder." whoa. what does an actual scientist think about this notion?
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a death penalty defense disagreeing with climate advocates. former chair of the earth and atmospheric climates. judith curry, thanks for coming on tonight. do you think that people who raise questions about climate change should be prosecuted for premeditated murder? >> well, of course not. i think it's a rather w ludicrous proposal. i hope that nobody is taking it seriously. climate change is a very complex issue. and i'm concerned that we have oversimplified both the problem and its solution. and we need to have a widepr ranging debate about all this. and people trying to stifle it are short changing science, the policy process and our democracy. >> tucker: but why would we have a debate on something that's absolutely settled about which we know everything? isn't a debate just allowing industry to destroy the
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earth for profit? >> we understand some basic >> we understand some basic things. like we know that the climate has been warming.th we know that humans have been emitting carbon dioxide.ar we know that carbon dioxidee warms the planet. however, there is widespread disagreement on how much of the recent warm something -- is caused by humans. how much climate will change in the 21st century. is warming bad or not? and what, if anything, can we do about it? all of those issues are topics of intense debate. very complex topics. >> tucker: what do you mean "is warming bad"?ad we know that -- and i think i'm quoting al gore and leonardo dicaprio here whenec i say it's an existential threat to the planet, judith curry. how could you even raise the question, is it bad?
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what do you mean by that? >> well, i don't think anybody thinks it's an existential threat to the planet who is seriously looking at this problem fromhr an academic perspective. climate has always changed. whether warming is intrinsically good or bad, that's a value judgment. there is a lot of uncertainty about what might happen. what are the impacts and whether they are bad or good. whether they are bad or good is fundamentally a value judgment. and some regions might benefit and some might be harmed. i mean, that's just part of the way weather and climate works. >> tucker: are you surprised to learn that al goree studied theology and not climatology in college? >> no. [laughter] >> tucker: and with that, dr. judith curry, it is
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always great to see you. i hope you will come back any time. thank you. >> okay. thank you. >> tucker: a big night at fox news tonight. sean hannity is our neighbor again. this time at 9:00 p.m. eastern, which is about 5 minutes exactly from right now. be back in a second. we will see him. rer. where you can compare multiple quote options online and choose what's right for you. woah. flo and jamie here to see hqx. flo and jamie request entry. slovakia. triceratops. tapioca. racquetball. staccato. me llamo jamie. pumpernickel. pudding. employee: hey, guys! home quote explorer. it's home insurance made easy. password was "hey guys."
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sean hannity is back again at 9:00 pm eastern. he's got some big announcements in store tonight. we're all going to be watching. >> sean: two. >> tucker: two. sean hannity ladies and gentlemen. have a great show. >> sean: thank you, welcome to hannity. we are following two major breaking news stories. tonight begins a new chapter in the cable news wars. we're now back live at 9:00 pm. we'll have more in just a minute. tonight the president takes on the nfl and players who refuseav to stand for the national anthem and our flag. vice-president mike pence is at a political rally tonight and a he's standing with president trump in that race for the send senate. we'll have his comments. steve bannon will join us in his first cable interview since h leaving the white house, also tonight newt gingrich, laura ingraham and these announcements. first tonight's l

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