tv Fox News Tonight FOX News October 12, 2017 7:00pm-8:00pm PDT
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different source? >> sean: it opens in theaters october 27th. this will not insult your intelligence or values. i hope you will think about watching it. hannity.com, theaters near you. kill me does next. see you tomorrow kilmeade is next. see you tomorrow. >> brian: hi, everybody. i am brian kilmeade. welcome to "fox news tonight." we have a lot on our plate tonight. my pages are 10 feet tall. obamacare, trump is tired of waiting. this came down about 20 minutes ago. sanctuary cities getting a big final warning from trump's justice department. attorney general sessions is ready to go. police department around the world circling harvey weinstein. why? mr. weinstein was fired from his own company on sunday, you probably know. he's currently in arizona. he claims her rehab after both
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"the new york times" and new yorker magazine released stunning accounts from several women who claim the oscar-winning producer sexually harassed them and in some cases sexually assaulted them. here's what weinstein told the paparazzi yesterday. >> i'm not doing okay. i'm trying. i've got to get help. you know what? we all make mistakes. a second chance, i hope. >> brian: mistakes? weinstein might want to be careful what he wishes for because the nypd is giving its criminal investigations into producer a second chance of sorts saying it's taking a fresh look. for some reason, they stopped looking and the criminal sexual abuse allegations coming this way, it took place probably in the big apple and beyond. scotland yard across the pond in the u.k. is reportedly looking into harvey weinstein sexual abuse of an actress in london during the 1980s. that's how far back this goes.
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take a listen to judge jeanine pirro. >> this is a predator. he's a serial predator. he has prayed on vulnerable, young women. he dangles the carrot of fame and fortune and the ability to be in movies. he's gotten away with it. >> brian: i always feel like the judge is yelling at me even though i didn't do anything. joining us now, took a very talented minds. troy slayton. and here in new york, wendy patrick. let's start with you, wendy. this is changing like the stock market. 20 women say they were harassed. three alleged rapes. seven women he allegedly assaulted. 17 say he made unwanted sexual advances. how rare is this case? i've never seen anything like this. >> this is in a class by itself. patterns of making a predator.
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it's one of those things that's going to be very important. where did these things happen and when? that will determine whether or not we can file criminal charges. here's the thing, just as delay doesn't have to be justice denied for those victims. even if one case can be filed, some of the other cases even if they are well beyond the statutes, a judge has the discretion to use those victims as evidence showing intent and pattern which corroborates the cases that can be filed. >> brian: troy, some of these cases have very famous names. angelina jolie and this other woman, louisiana giese says she was assaulted in 2008 and there are some just around the corner. what is your take on how much trouble he is in? >> he's in a lot of trouble. both civilly and criminally. yesterday on tucker carlson, harvey levin says he can't imagine why harvey weinstein
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would be looking into miramax because he cannot think of any federal charges so the doj must be doing this politically. if people at miramax and the weinstein company knew about this, if they helped cover it up -- being reported, some people would leave the room to allow him to be engaged in that type of activity and if he offered or promised anyone something in order for sexual favors? this could bring down the miramax company and this is really huge. >> brian: all these projects are running from the weinstein group right now. the talk of jay-z's saying i would like to go in and be an investor in take it over. that's a side note. what about the assisted wrangles with the stars? the productions, maybe the assistant at the desk? up front of his?
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a friend of his? are they all in trouble question marks because there's different levels of liability that could be attached. naming and shaming. the liability company might face depends on who engaged in the harassment. they could be liable, whether or not they knew about it. then of course, there some should have known standards. there are a lot of standards. suffice to say, the question about who know about this, they are saying this was the worst kept secret in hollywood, it was just the beginning of that inquiry. >> brian: i'm wondering too, as you go through the timeline and say who told what. one of paltrow said in her 20s, she had not yet emerged as a superstar that would star in multiple movies. she's calling out brad pitt. she gets assaulted and he goes up to harvey weinstein and threatens him and never have any problems again. yet she does not come forward. they become megastars. they did not use their fame and power to put the pressure on
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him. some of these names are the who's who of hollywood success stories. i'm not going back and correcting the crime. >> i've never been the victim of a crime like that. hollywood is a very tightly knit community. no one wants to be on the blacklist. i've been in the entertain entertainment business for many. you don't want to do anything to rock the boat. they might have been frightened for their careers. now that they are a-list stars, that would certainly be the time to come out and let the truth be known and let the chips fall where they may. >> brian: you are so right. i see so many celebrities that have come out, they seem very talented like james woods. they say by the way, i am a conservative and i think george bush was pretty good. they can't get work. they are afraid to rock the
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boat. the phrase is keep your mouth shut, rock the boat. even if you are brad pitt? >> that's it, there's the caliber that did not need to worry about rocking the boat. here's the thing about sexual harassment -- coat >> brian: i'm not judging the women at all. >> it's obviously the most underreported crime in the world. part of the reason has to do not just with him i going to get the next role but there are relational dynamics and a power imbalance that exists. sometimes, that in and of itself is a factor in separate and apart from losing a role. that awkwardness and humiliation and shame at having been a victim or allowed it or worried that god forbid you gave out the wrong signals, that's another reason some victims do not come forward. >> brian: i'm anybody. i'm just saying that it seems like hollywood has these inside jokes. received seth macfarlane in 2013 saying hey, see these women who are finalist when win the oscar?
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you all don't have to pretend harvey weinstein -- >> be attracted to harvey weinstein. >> brian: he said i wanted to do stand up for my friend who was assaulted by harvey weinstein, jessica barth. she went on for a lot of success. that's why took the shot at him. really? how courageous. we didn't even know it you were talking about. >> it doesn't make a lot of sense. >> at the people at miramax to see other day and the weinstein company are saying they had no idea, his brother's saying we had no idea this was going on. but david boys who negotiated his contract in 2015 sent they w of at least three or four sediments that paid women. to have this big surprised look really means maybe they are trying to win an oscar. >> brian: good point. i will tell you how this is going to be big and how you should keep your nights free for a while. as i was coming into night starring for the weinstein
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story, we have an amazon story. roy price now put on leave. he is head of tv for amazon. evidently, this rose mccowan claimed she was rape-d by harvey weinstein. when she released that, her project was killed. now she wants redemption. she tweeted about it. this guy is put on leave and it goes right to jeff bezos. >> that's another one of the collateral issues. the law is supposed to protect whistle-blowers but in practice, we see instances like this happen all the time. their civil liability and criminal liability. even if we cannot go forward criminally, some of these women coming forward could bring court actions. that's only for the evidence. >> brian: help me understand this, most people listening
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right now don't go to los angeles to become famous actors and actresses. if i'm a 20-year-old aspiring actors and i feel like i was threatened, assaulted, or raped, or someone that powerful -- would you take my case? against a hollywood mogul? you probably would not take that, would you? >> not unless we have the 20-30, maybe even more people coming out now that had cooperation and add credence to her story. to tack on what wendy patrick was saying, once the fbi comes knocking and ask questions, people will line up to cooperate. it's a federal crime to lie to the fbi. people are going to be cooperating and we will see a federal prosecution. >> brian: are you curious why "the new york times" waited 13 years on this story? and nbc, waiting five days? this was their reporter?
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they said the story wasn't developed. where is that going. >> i was curious about that. we have known about these allegations swirling around for years. i did a little bit of digging. part of the problem was they did not have the kind of fact-checking available. most people would not come forward and talk about it. everyone says someone's more courageous than i. i'm going to add fuel to the fire. it is a great question because it really has just been since last week that so many of these voices have finally been heard. >> brian: troy, eight people -- i guess this ronan farrow had eight people coming forward. some on tape saying this happened, this took place. they handed it to nbc and they said no thank you but the new yorker says welcome. they were still second to "the new york times" to have this 13 years ago. it shows you the powerful lacing together a big protection shield.
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some by paying off someone in the democratic party. others, get someone with influence in the press to the tech people that did not go along with your scam and protective, should they get offensive on you. am i correct? >> it smacks of politics, doesn't it, brian? we would hope that reporters would want to get a story out like this no matter who the person is. it looks like the press, which is notoriously left leaning was really reticent about bringing this case forward. all the politicians that he raised money for took their time in coming out to condemn harvey weinstein, including hillary clinton. >> brian: $43,000, she should be writing a check and giving it to this charity, president obama got $54,000. i imagine president obama would be in the dark. you'd never send your teenage daughter to intern for somebody that you had heard these things
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about. but hillary clinton was with him a lot longer. they will be a lot of questions. >> sure is. every second she waited will be a question. troy is both in the acting and legal business. he can appreciate but some of my hillary clinton, she knew she was going to have to come forward. yeah, it is now why the waiting game? why did it take one day? >> brian: the gel always works, right? you are a man that looks good in jail whether it's for a part or defending a case. >> gel or jail? >> brian: president trump taking the campaign to repeal obamacare into his own hands. the left cannot be more furious. he just did something 20 minutes ago. i will share that story in just a moment. you know who likes to be
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i will tell you what he did tonight. >> yeah, brian, politico is reporting tonight that he plans to cut off subsidy payments, that would be the administration's most aggressive move you have to dismantle obamacare and if it is true, we go to reached out to the white house and no comment yet. something the chief of staff john kelly acknowledged today. >> since the big bill did not pass, and we probably won't have a health care bill until the spring, this was a way to take care of as many americans as he could legally with an executive order. >> most apparently, this order allows small businesses to pool together and by health care coverage across state lines.
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>> this will allow thousands of small business employers to have the same purchasing power as large employers. >> it eases restrictions on short term policies that last less than a year and allows employers to set aside pretext pay that people buy later in individual policies. driving more people out of obamacare exchanges, the senate minority leader chuck schumer saying today it will send costs soaring and add further chaos to the markets. the nonpartisan kaiser foundation says the effects could be insignificant or a big deal, all depending on how these regulations are written. now back to the energizer bunny. do you ever sleep? at all, brian? >> brian: i will sleep. just not as most. i don't have to be sharp. you've watched my career, doug. thank you so much. now we will analyze what doug just broke down. let's go to dave and bossy,
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deputy campaign manager on the trim campaign and fox news contributor. >> a fantastic day and as a supporter of trump's agenda, this is the frustration coming out today, in the sense that an executive order by the president, it was not the president's first choice. this was not how he wanted to do it. he wanted congress to do their job. they failed. john mccain a week or two ago saved obamacare. we all know that, we saw the senate fail again. senator mccain saved obamacare single-handedly. this is what the president had to do to rein in the outrageous cost of obamacare to give people a better health care and better choices. >> brian: he had no choice. it's exactly what president obama was doing it his
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second term. it expires. another president comes in or in seven or three years and they will change it right away. he has always said i like people to have the ability to go across state lines to buy insurance. that's what today does. >> that was a staple in the campaign. the president said it all the time. you need to break down these barriers between states to bring in competition and lower premiums. that's what today did. >> brian: your access to the white house is well known. working on the outside because you want to be a parent too and go to your children's games. you want to be able to coach her kids games but you missed your son's baseball game today. a lot of people running with the story invented and fair talking about the president being very upset saying something to his security guy saying i hate everybody in the white house except for a few. extremely frustrated with luther strange's loss. he feels like he backed the
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wrong guy. also that steve bannon told "vanity fair" that the president has only a 30% chance of finishing out his first term. he set his own cabinet will vote him out. what did you find out? >> the "vanity fair" story is just disgusting. it's the definition of fake news. it's what the president talks about the american people. on a day that he is talking about immigration policy and health and tax reform, they are attacking his personnel, attacking him, anything but -- they are attacking him on things that don't matter. put in or anything else. they don't care about the facts. these stories are pervasive. the mainstream media quite frankly is broken. that's what we've seen with the story. i did reach out. i spoke directly to steve bannon. >> brian: you brought him into the campaign. >> eight introduced him to the
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president. the bottom line is i spoke to steve and he said this absolutely is a fabrication. did not happen. this comes on the heels of steve and i spending a lot of time recently talking about the president's reelection. and how we can on the outside help the president get reelected and win what we consider a landslide opportunity. >> brian: i don't want you to go out and get "vanity fair" but they are saying 13 of the 24 cabinet members are going to turn on the president and throw him out and make vice president pence the president of the united states. that's what this article said. >> it's laughable. 60 million people elected donald trump president of the united states. the 25th amendment is there for outrageous circumstances where the president is not capable of doing his job. this comes on the heels of an article, at the end of an article talking about whether he likes staff or not. it's outrageous.
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look, he is a great boss. he loves the people he works with. she is a loyal person to the people he works with. that's what people don't get about president trump. >> brian: he had lunch with secretary of state rex tillerson who was not fired. they had a productive lunch. john kelly says i like the job. i'm not fired. >> he was very funny. >> brian: extremely funny. he talked about the need for the wall. he seems all and on the president's agenda. together, they docked out all the "vanity fair" facts. >> exactly. that's why these fake news stories are so frustrating to people like me and folks inside the white house. on days that they are taking huge steps to help the american people, whether obamacare, repealing and placing, or dealing with tax reform that they reckon people desperately need and they need it done this year, our economy is about to
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explode. the president has done an amazing job. in so many other things. he gets no credit for it. they say he's doing a bad job and then all of a sudden you have this fake news story. >> brian: he also said i don't really have a problem with tweeting. i'm not there to control him. i enjoy doing my job. for those that say you have unknown sources that's telling you what is happening in the white house, get better sources. unless you want to attack the integrity of the confidant of the former marine confidant who lost his son in battle, fighting for america for 50 years, you can't have it both ways. he told you what he knows as truth. >> i thought general kelly did an amazing job at the podium. he was very forthright and forthcoming. i thought his delivery was excellent. he has a tough job. no one is saying it's not a tough job. being chief of staff for the president of the united states is very hard. in this atmosphere when you are in the fishbowl and they are
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always attacking you, nothing this president does is acceptable to the mainstream media. no matter what it is. >> brian: you have full access to the green room food. good job, david bossi. i appreciate you doing the research. white house chief of staff john kelly chastising the press for misreporting stories but is it all falling on deaf ears? don't go away. i am taking attendance and i know who youte are. and how to work around your uc. that's how i thought it had to be. but then i talked to my doctor about humira, and learned humira can help get and keep uc under control... when certain medications haven't worked well enough. humira can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections and cancers, including lymphoma, have happened;
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>> brian: white house chief of staff john kelly made a surprise appearance and everyone sat up straight. he had a few choice words for members of the press corps. many of whom he did not know their names. >> it's amazing how many are misreported. i will give you the benefit of the doubt that you are operating off of contacts, leaks, whatever you call them. i just offer to the advice, i'd
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say -- maybe develop some better sources. >> brian: president trump seems to agree with those sentiments, in a different way. tweeting out... viewers beware, may be worse than cnn. general kelly also addressed the "vanity fair" report, be repairable. >> although i read it all the time and pretty consistently, i'm not quitting today. i don't believe and i just talked to the president, i don't think i'm being fired today. i'm not so frustrated in this job that i am thinking of leaving. >> brian: joining us now with reaction, retired lieutenant colonel oliver north.
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colonel, is that the man you know? >> that's the john kelly i know, that i've admired for years. he's on the record, calm, cool, confident. i do not know what they expected, brian. he is a united states marine. he knows what it's like to be shot at. like by bad people shooting real bullets. not just a bunch of blowhards. he lost his son. his whole demeanor exudes confidence. he is not quitting. not getting fired or frustrated. that's fair. the fact is, he ought to be frustrated. i thought his general chiding, he's constituting about getting better sources, it was spot on. you've got to ask yourself this, why is it that so many of our colleagues in the media business believe anonymous sources and
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disbelieve an officially john kelly speaking on the record? why is that? >> i think they have a problem -- when their stories blow up before their eyes, there's a little bit of a problem. the only way to do that is to bring the brick people out there. if you have a problem with the budget release, why don't you do that? that's what the president does. if you have a problem with the foreign policy department, bring out the secretary of state. if you have rumors about the chief of staff, why don't we bring him out? he said he didn't want to do a lot of press. i wanted to get my sea legs on this position. when he comes out and says he's in control, he also said i have no problem with the president tweeting and he said i'm creating some order. that's all i'm doing. >> of course, that's what his job is. it's one of the toughest jobs in the world. no matter who the president is and who the chief of staff is. he was very clear about the fact that he was made chief of staff to control the process on how the president gets information
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to make the correct decision. >> brian: another area of expertise, iran. the president is going to make a major speech on iran. where he is expected to decertify the deal he was handed and give it to congress to fix and reconfigure and go forward. this did not get the majority of votes in the senate. to think this is a right move? a lot of conservatives say as much as i don't like the deal like condoleezza rice, i would keep it. >> welcome to the obama administration's great gift to a new world disorder. remember, the president back in april -- the law requires to recertify every 90 days. this so-called joint comprehensive plan of action. as john kerry called it, the iranian deal. and reports also confirm it's in our interest. it's worse. the american people than obamacare. just a matter of how many and how fast.
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a very bad deal. >> brian: we don't like the fat that they could shoot off ballistic missiles. do they have proof that they are breaking it? joe lieberman hates this deal and they are saying they are not letting the international atomic energy agency inspectors inside the test. we are counting on them to test themselves. >> we've only got a few seconds left. here's four reasons why it's such a bad deal. there are so many loopholes and sunset provisions and blind spot where they can be in compliance with the deal. working with the democratic people's republic of korea. there are no consequences in this so-called deal for iranian noncompliance. the snapback provisions that were so talked about are ludicrous from the start. the islamic revolutionary guard corps runs their nuclear program and farsi international inspectors from getting into the military sites.
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they carry deal which is what it really is makes no mention of other iranian bad behavior. the islamic revolutionary guard corps is running amok. and sudan. no holds barred. the iranians held american hostages. for ten years. a 10-year sentence and another father-son couple that are being held over there. negotiating a revised deal can get congress commits all the kinds of things we need to pay attention to. i appreciate you mentioning war stories in our sister or brother network, fbn. 102 episodes of military documentaries that are better than anything on pbs or ken burns. >> brian: as great as your marine carrier was, i think this is your finest work. thanks, colonel. i appreciate it. >> if semper fi, buddy.
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>> brian: a lot more, the justice department giving a last chance to big sanctuary cities the straighten up and stopping sanctuary cities. this is your last chance. we will give you the details in just a moment. maybe it's time for otezla (apremilast). otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months,... ...with reduced redness,... ...thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information has... ...no requirement for routine lab monitoring. don't use if you're allergic to otezla. otezla may cause severe diarrhea, nausea, or vomiting. tell your doctor if these occur. otezla is associated with an increased... ...risk of depression. tell your doctor if you have... ...a history of depression... ...or suicidal thoughts,... ...or if these feelings develop. some people taking otezla... ...reported weight loss. your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper...
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a farmer's market.ve what's in this kiester. a fire truck. even a marching band. and if i can get comfortable talking about this kiester, then you can get comfortable using preparation h. for any sort of discomfort in yours. preparation h. get comfortable with it. >> brian: the justice department issuing a stark warning against sanctuary cities. they have their last chance to comply with the law before
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losing millions in federal funds. among the cities that just won't play ball, chicago. new york, and philadelphia. they have until october 27th to provide documentation that they've changed their ways. joining us right now with reaction, steve cortez, a fox news contributor who is a member of the trump campaigns hispanic advisory council and in los angeles, california talk radio host. will los angeles comply, ethan? will california which named it self a sanctuary state, get on board? >> absolutely not. there's no reason because the law is on the side of the sanctuary cities. read the actual federal law, the one that the attorney general is talking about right now. u.s. code section 8 -- title eight, they are in compliance. but he is trying to do is strong-armed them. red meat. the attorney general would very likely lose. this is a political move, not an
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actual legal one. >> brian: no doubt about it, it seems like the cities have dunk and like many others haven't. they're going to put these things in the court again. doubling down on fox & friends, does ethan have a point? >> no, he does not at all. brian, we've seen the movie before. it was in the 1960s when southern governors like governor wallace decided they were going to flout federal law for their own narrow political agenda and disregard the safety of their people and the civil rights of their people. that's what we see right now. i am here in chicago where i live today, in chicago, we have a city where wide swaths of the city are practically war zones. our mayor, rahm emanuel, rather than focus on the public safety of the citizens of chicago, he would posture and cater to liberal elites and declare that we are a sanctuary city. i hate the term, by the way. sanctuary for whom?
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it's not sanctuary for the victims, for the cops, because dangerous illegal immigrants and i'm hispanic -- dangerous illegal immigrants are allowed to hide in plain sight. the so-called sinks were cities. >> brian: new orleans is also on the list. and cook county, illinois. ethan, is he making a point that the illegals are more important than the citizens of california and the united states? >> absolutely not. the deal in california as we have two and a half million people who are neighbors and coworkers, friends. the overwhelming majority. >> brian: and illegal. >> they don't have proper documentation. >> brian: they snuck in. >> big industries wanted to hire them. they built lives. they have children. you're going to break up families which we've already seen happen in places like los angeles. they arrest dads dropping the kids off at school. >> brian: that's totally disingenuous. we are not talking about dads dropping the kids off at school.
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>> that's what actually happened here. it happened right here. >> brian: we are talking about dangerous illegal immigrants. in terms matter by the way. you are not undocumented. if you break into my home in the middle of the night, you are not an undocumented visitor. you are a thief and burglar. if you decide to break the laws of our country, you are an illegal immigrant. if you are dangerous, you need to be gone yesterday. >> brian: i will say this, even i agree with you. there is only people we see that are working their way into society. the irish and italians came in. we know they came in at different times. i've seen how hard they worked and they do a lot of jobs that we don't want. but the president wants an organization and wants to turn off the magnet to make it easier for los angeles and san diego and orange county in san francisco to make ends meet. they have some organization so you know it's coming across. who is trying to make a living and who's trying to join again? do you understand where he's
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coming from? >> i understand that we ought to implement things in conjunction with working programs like agriculture and the state of california, one-third of all the food produced in the entire united states. it's almost exclusively staffed with undocumented workers at this point. you have to have a functioning work visa program. and enforce the e-verify. i agree wanted to know who is here but at deportation for its rounded people up and throwing red meat at the bay, that's not the way to do it and it's not humane. >> brian: to agree to shut off the magnet so we don't get another 2 million? it was misinterpreted when the president signed the executive order on daca, coming across the border, that's a disaster even for president obama, steve. you've got send the right message to central and south america. nothing against you. we have rules in our country. >> to your point, i want a
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permanent solution for daca people. they are a different category. they did not choose to break our laws. i have great empathy and i want them to stay. i disagree with a lot of my allies on team trump on that. this is also very important. we have a right as a country and it is not seen a phobic or racist, we have a right to determine the processes and rules for becoming an american citizen. we are sick and tired and part of why trump won is a revolt against the idea that we don't have that right to determine those values and rules. we do. we quite simply do. >> brian: and fortifying the border/barrier. it's something obama and clinton and schumer were in support of. but this debate happens every two weeks here on this show. thanks so much for joining us. i appreciate it. maybe they will get things done at washington and make our lives a little bit easier. steve, good job.
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coming up straight ahead, his twitter censoring pro-life ads across its platform? why pro-life groups are blasting the social media giant but not facebook. we will explain why. this woman is laughing because she's listening to audible. and this woman is pretending her boss's terrible story is funny. experience the comedy, not your commute. dial star-star-audible on your smartphone to start listening today.
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>> brian: congressman marsha blackburn and pro-life advocates scored a victory after twitter allowed her to promote an antiabortion campaign at on its platform. facebook coo could not help working in a dig at her social media rifle. >> the question is, should divisive political issue ads run? our answer is yes. when you cut off speech for one person, you cut off speaks for all people. >> brian: a number of major pro-life groups are saying twitter's reversal is not going far enough. and still censoring other pro-life ads on the social media network. joining us right now with her analysis is lila rose, the founder of a pro-life group. you see a big difference between facebook and twitter? >> there shouldn't be. their mission statements are very similar. sharing ideas.
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and communicating with people across the world. the cardinal sin, if you're pro-life, your ads are going to get blocks. there ads have been blocked. the entire account has been shut down. >> brian: we had the congresswoman on and she told her story and the ad was reversed. it surprised me and surprised her. did it surprise you? >> more and more pressure is building. even us talking about it is important, twitter is noticing people do notice and care but they being hypocrites, i believe they are violating their own ad policy and misleading people and users. i think the more noise we may come the better. we are telling them that look, you can't claim to be one thing and build relationships with advertisers under a certain promise when actually you are not fulfilling it. you are lying to people about who you are and you are lying and brought to my blocking speech. >> brian: what changed after
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congresswoman blackburn? do you expect there to be something if you put an ad out tomorrow ? >> we're still in the thick of it. twitter allows pro-life advertising from live action. advertising that has been blocked. it is time to stop that. it's good they reversed their track on a percentage of blackburn but they need to do that for live action. they are letting planned parenthood advertise as we speak, the pro-abortion group advertising as we speak. it's time for them to complete their correction and allow us to advertise. >> brian: are you on facebook? >> yes. >> brian: that was no problem. >> facebook over now has been pretty good. >> brian: facebook took all ads. even from robots and russians. they are saying wait, you need to screen it because you need people to actually scream that. are you concerned about where this might be going or do you think you're just trying to get -- they are just trying to get some personal interaction between would-be buyers? >> i'm very concerned about
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where it's going. if this is a trend that group like twitter, thankfully they are saying we don't believe in suppression of political viewpoints. pro-life isn't even a political viewpoint. as a cultural belief that life is precious. why is that so controversial for twitter? it's really troubling because they hold so much power. so many people use the platform. they are misleading the public. i'm concerned if this continues, this is a very bad trend protect companies to be doing this. you need to stop. >> brian: let us know how it goes on live action as he try once again, there is some presidents now. i appreciate you joining us tonight. meanwhile, more fox news tonight. in just a moment. don't go away. impossible to ignore.
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if you have heart failure symptoms, your risk of hospitalization could increase, making tomorrow uncertain. but entresto is a medicine that was proven, in the largest heart failure study ever, to help more people stay alive and out of the hospital than a leading heart failure medicine. women who are pregnant must not take entresto. it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren. if you've had angioedema while taking an ace or arb medicine, don't take entresto. the most serious side effects are angioedema, low blood pressure, kidney problems, or high potassium in your blood. ♪ tomorrow, tomorrow... ♪ when can we do this again, grandpa? well, how about tomorrow? ask your doctor about entresto and help make tomorrow possible. >> brian: before ago, a quick thing to keep your eye on tomorrow. samantha power, former u.s.
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ambassador to the united nations who had 260 unmasking requests will be going on the record on capitol hill with the intelligence community to find out why she needed 260 unmasking requests. that makes no sense. we will get some answers. before we go commode of the most important announcement you will hear. my upcoming book drops october october 24. "andrew jackson: the miracle of new orleans." if you go to brian kilmeade brian kilmeade.com, i can customize it. tomorrow, senator rand paul. and attorney general jeff sessions going after the sanctuary cities. on my radio show tomorrow. 9:00 to noon. then geraldo rivera. chris stirewalt, marie hearth and -- marie harf.
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don't miss it. see you tomorrow. it's friday. it will be a two drink minimum and a cover charge but i would like you to show up. don't go anywhere. now you can watch tucker. >> tucker: well, good evening and welcome to "tucker carlson tonight." the downfall of hollywood producer harvey weinstein is essentially complete tonight. the allegations are far too numerous to ignore. he has been fired from his own company and he is apparently in some kind of rehab facility talking about himself while the nypd investigates criminal charges against him. whatever happens next,, you pretty much know what harvey weinstein's wikipedia entry is going to say 20 years from now. but the larger weinstein saga is just beginning. many powerful people knew what harvey weinstein was doing and not only ignored his crimes but actively tookrv his side against his many victims. it's a long list, but at
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