tv The Five FOX News November 7, 2017 2:00pm-3:00pm PST
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that's on fbn. also covering the president's speech from asia on what he's going to do about north korea. if it matters to you and your money. see you tonight. >> kimberly: i'm kimberly guilfoyle with juan williams, jesse watters, dana perino and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five" ." why was a man convicted of assaulting his wife and child able to purchase a semiautomatic weapon and other firearms legally in america? devon patrick kelly massacre 26 people with those guns on sunday. the u.s. air force admitting it failed to enter his court-martial conviction into a database used in background checks. authorities in texas confirmed today kelley wasn't in the
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system. >> there was nothing in the database that precluded him from purchasing a firearm. he is not in any fbi database. >> kimberly: we learned that kelley escaped from a mental health facility in 2012. the massacre has stirred up another debate about gun control in america. it expanded all the way up to south korea today where the president was asked this. >> reporter: i wonder if you would consider extreme vetting for people trying to buy are gone. >> you are bringing up a situation that probably shouldn't be discussed too much right now. we should maybe let a little time go by. but that's okay if you think it's an appropriate question. if you did what you are suggesting, there would have been no difference three days ago. he might not of had that very brave person who happened to have a gun or a rifle in his truck, go out and shoot him and hit him and neutralize him. not going to help.
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>> kimberly: your thoughts and comments on the president's remarks. >> greg: that's always the debate you're going to get on both sides. good guy with a gun, bad guy with a gun. there are more good guys and there are bad guys. that's why it's common sense you hope there's more good guys out there and you have them trained. we will talk about that later. i want to take this thing in its entirety. this guy fractured an infants skull, escaped from a mental hospital, beat up a puppy. these are all markers of the kind of person who should not be allowed to have weapons. this guy was caught sneaking firearms into his airbase. he was attempting to carry out death threats against his chain of command. we are told to see something and say something. nobody did anything. how did this guy get a gun? this is the last creature on earth. this is a mistake that rivals
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fort hood. somebody dropped the ball. this is like the doll hassan. they knew this was a bad egg and they didn't do anything. they tell us when you see something, say something and nobody does anything because nobody wants to get in trouble. this is a huge mistake. >> kimberly: when you see the news and developments that have happened. escaped from a mental facility, beats animals, fractured his stepson's goal. this is the exactly the type of person who shouldn't be allowed to have any weapons to do further harm. like greg said, showing tendencies. >> dana: one president trump two days ago now talked about being a mental health issue. this is actually a criminal issue. when there are cries of "do something," do something would be not necessarily pass new laws but how about enforce the laws on the books. senator cornyn had to introduce legislation that said tell you what. he would be a great idea if
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everybody that has information on criminal convictions could upload that to the background check system. how about we do that? if that doesn't pass by a voice vote tomorrow, that's outrage. >> kimberly: more time has passed since the horrific murders of these innocent lives, and we are learning more about this man, about the killer. about his background and about where the system failed these families. >> jesse: the air force has blood on its hands. all they had to do is do their job, and they failed. the inspector general is now launching an investigation. the air force is a great institution, saves countless lives but they lost two dozen this week. the guy fractures and infant's goal, chokes his girlfriend, beats her, kicks her. it is only a misdemeanor. that's wrong on the start of it. second of all, the judge. his name is jay wesley moore.
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soft sentence, one year lockup. it should've been five years. if he had served five years, the minimum for doing something like this, he would've still been locked up and wouldn't have been able to go on this shooting spree. and the 12 month confinement automatically triggers no handgun or rifle purchases. why was it a bad conduct discharge instead of a dishonorable discharge? if it was dishonorable, which it was, beating infants and women, that should have, again, triggered a ban on producing weapons. caught escaping from a mental facility. that's obviously, this guy is a total maniac. there are already gun control laws and legal remedies in place to prevent this guy from purchasing a weapon. because of human error and bad judgment, this guy was allowed to go on a rampage. for the media to say that this is all about gun control, i mean, it's like shooting first and asking questions later.
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if the answer is more gun control, they are asking the wrong questions. there are already gun-control laws in place. they are so out of touch, especially this woman up there asking the president a question. so out of touch with the american people to ask something like that. it really makes me angry. the media's reaction of the recent tragedies. it's been so off-base. the las vegas shooter. what was the reaction? band silencers? how about the nyc terror attack? they are talking about islamaphobia. you remember what happened with the hurricanes come they are talking about melania's heels and global warming. it's no wonder they get the moniker of fake news. >> kimberly: that was well-prepared, jesse. to juan, a couple issues. the gun-control debate taking center stage. you also have the president's reaction, dealing with this issue while he's overseas on a trip and being asked. what are your thoughts?
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>> juan: i think the president, and it's sad for me to say but i think so many conservative just have kind of a knee-jerk reaction. we are not going to talk about this. not the best time to talk about it. it's too soon after the tragedy or i'm overseas or i'm busy. but i don't want to talk about it. that's when it comes off as. i think, i wanted to respond to something jesse said. i don't think the media is out of touch when they ask a question of the president of the united states. it's 80% of americans think we should have universal background checks. when i am listening to my colleagues here this afternoon, i think you guys really are making a case that if someone has a history of mental disturbance, a history of criminal behavior, we as an american people should know about it and we should be able to impose some limit on their ability to access. >> greg: there was a mistake. >> juan: but this is not a question anymore. this is why i was so pleased
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with jesse yesterday when he said we can't agree on gun control because you, juan, you want to gun control. jesse doesn't. we can agree certain people who are criminals, mentally deranged, should not be able to get guns. and yet the congress does nothing. >> greg: you know it could be done, we talk about locking up people. there's a missing remedy here, that's institutionalization. when you have a maniac and a monster, we have no place to with them. over the last 50 years, we've seen a decline of 95% in state-run institutions. we house under 50,000 people who are dangerously or mentally ill. it's a 95% drop new factor in the doubling of the population. we don't have a place to put these people long-term because we've made that a toxic decision. we've made the idea of institutionalization is wrong when in fact it saves lives, and it would've saved lives if this guy was any permanent situation or semipermanent. >> kimberly: there were a number of files that resulted in
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26 lives lost and horrific injuries. last night, two strangers who banded together to stop the deranged gunman embraced at a vigil for the victims. emotional images of stephen willeford and johnny langendorff and bracing. he insists he's not a hero. many feel otherwise. >> i am no hero. i'm not. i think my god, my lord protected need to give me the skills to do what needed to be done. i wish i could've gotten there faster. but i didn't know. i didn't know what was happening. >> kimberly: greg, quick. we will take it around. these are the kind of comments the president was making. >> greg: you see an act of heroism, you question whether you can do it. the answer is yes, if you're trained. this is the first and only time
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he's ever been in the situation he responded to the situation perfectly. he was an nra certified, trained in this. we talked about the solution of pardoning soft targets. you hard and soft targets through the training of individuals. in israel and there are terror attacks, they advised citizens they are to arm their houses because they are people with knives that comes to their houses. they train the population to respond to threats. that was a man who didn't have to think. that's why he responded heroically. even though he was terrified, it was ingrained in his skull of what to do. >> kimberly: unbelievable. makes the case, makes the point for proper training and education. arming yourself with the education about weapons. >> dana: also i think what he's talking about is his faith and how his faith guided him. he doesn't think of himself as a hero. obviously we are all going to disagree with that but i can understand where he's coming from. he is saying i have this capability in these talents
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because god provided it to me and he had me there at the right place and right time and i wish i could've done more. it's not easy to talk about your faith, especially when it will be ridiculed by so many. i admire him for being willing not only to talk about that terrible day but to share with america and the world that he actually believes it was god that was guiding him. >> kimberly: yeah, very impactful lesson. he talks about his faith guiding him and giving the courage, that he had the wherewithal in the training to be able to jump into action. >> jesse: and i said the media was out of touch, juan, because they were bashing the nra. guess what, as you would like to say, it was an nra trained member who ended up saving lives that day. also out of touch because they are calling for more gun control yet i think three gun-control laws were broken and not enforced. it's not about having more gun control. we already have great gun-control in this country.
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but people didn't enforce it. people were sloppy, and a judge made a very lenient sentence. it was personal error, institutional error. that's why you saw this tragedy. >> kimberly: should have been charged with a felony instead of a misdemeanor. >> juan: i think the president was asked specifically a question, what you are saying, he was asked, would you back extreme vetting for anyone who wants to get a gun in the united states. he then ran away from the question. what you are saying is we need to extremely vet these people to make sure mistakes aren't made out to make sure people who are mentally incapacitated. >> jesse: we have extreme vetting but the vetters failed. >> juan: the big argument is about universal background checks. we don't have close to extreme vetting. president obama said we need a right to life argument here which is to say should be able to walk the streets and feel safe in your church without the thought that there are so many
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guns. anybody can walk in here. >> jesse: put the guys name in the system and this never would've happened. >> juan: put more guns everywhere. schools, churches. >> kimberly: we are probably going to find out -- the fbi's having a hard time getting into his phone. we know he was texting to his mother-in-law and his father. we will probably find out more. one of the things we're going to find i would imagine is that you have family members who know they are involved with a very dangerous individual. what is their recourse? what are they supposed to do in order to help prevent something? that actually would be something useful to talk about, not just on mental health. how do you incapacitate somebody who has the wherewithal to do it and if a family number is worried. it feels like the only thing we do is after the fact. >> kimberly: i think they have to report. they have to stand up and say i'm going to call the police and the authorities. you can love a family member. >> dana: not easy to do.
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>> greg: this guy should have been locked up. if you can't put him in prison, there has to be state-run facilities. we have to start thinking about it. >> kimberly: president trump puts kim jong un on notice again, this time on his doorstep. he sounded optimistic about resolving the north korean crisis peacefully. that's all next on "the five" ." ♪ hey, bud. you need some help? no, i'm good. come on, moe. i have to go. (vo) we always trusted our subaru impreza would be there for him someday. ok. that's it. (vo) we just didn't think someday would come so fast. see ya later, moe. (vo) the subaru impreza. the longest-lasting vehicle in its class. more than a car, it's a subaru.
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♪ >> jesse: kim jong un could almost hear president trump's voice with his own ears. mr. trump was 35 miles away from the border in seoul when he warned the u.s. military is prepared to act to deal with the rogue regime. >> we sent three of the largest aircraft carriers in the world and they are positioned. we have a nuclear submarine also positioned. we have many things happening that we hope, we help. in fact, i will go a step further and say we hope to god we never have to use. without being being said, i really believe it makes sense
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for north korea to come to the table and to make a deal that's good for the people of north korea and the people of the world. >> jesse: he was a bit more toned down today. no fire in serious threats to her little rocket man. he urged the north to come to the table for talks. president obama's secretary of state doesn't like the approach. john kerry, who believes in james taylor diplomacy, has an amusing new theory. trump is the reason north korea wants the bomb. >> i think the rhetoric to date has stepped over the line with respect to the messages that are being sent. giving people of north korea a reason to say we need a bomb. if we don't have a bomb, we are not going to be able to protect ourselves. >> jesse: mr. secretary, as he president pointed out in tokyo, week rhetoric over 24 years has led us to where we are today.
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this is gunship diplomacy at its finest. he has, what is it, the uss nimitz, ronald reagan, theodore roosevelt, and a nuclear submarine right off the coast. and he is saying let's come to the table. >> dana: nothing like military might will get you to a diplomatic solution. you have to have both, which is why secretary mattis and mcmaster say it's important that tillerson has the resources he needs. they don't want to use the military because diplomacy is so important. i am confused about the idea of talking. a couple months ago he said talks were useless. perhaps this is a bit about being unpredictable or saying something different in south korea because it helps the south koreans deal with their neighbors to the north. maybe that's what china is asking for. perhaps it's part of a grand strategy. maybe he will explain it more tonight at 9:00 p.m. president trump has a speech. the thing about secretary kerry
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saying trump has given north korea the reason to have a nuclear weapon reminds me of the phrase, any time you talk about going after islamic terrorism, the left would scream but this is what isis wants. this is what al qaeda wants. no, actually they want is to destroy western civilization and north korea wants a nuclear weapon because i think it will protect them from a world they think is out to get them. >> greg: north korea has been doing this before trump was in office. they have been doing it with every single president. john kerry, a driftwood sculpture human being. he made a deal with 9/11 enablers in iran. instead of dropping bombs on isis, he sent james taylor to france. america, you could argue, and somewhat disagree. i'm sure juan wed. we are probably made more progress with north korea under trump then in the last 40 years because we have china on board. that's different.
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we are targeting and isolating the north korean economy in a way that hasn't been done before. because of china. nobody wants war. i think what president trump is doing is good cop-bad cop. that's what it is. and it seems to be working, especially when he brings in his wild costar dennis rodman to close the deal. >> jesse: let's roll it. >> one thing with donald trump, the fact that he needs me to do one thing. donald trump, help us please. >> jesse: i am sure jimmy carter is thinking "what about me?" >> kimberly: he is like, put me in, coach. i'm ready to play. i can't really understand anything dennis rodman says. i want to talk more about president trump. people are criticizing and saying wait, now he wants to do
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diplomacy. where is this guy going? maybe that will work. maybe there is stuff like dana's thing that's happened or transpired. behind the scenes and he's getting a cooperative push from china or south korea. can you imagine, you were saying this and i'm thinking what if he had made comments there to really make it difficult when he's over there trying to reach out and establish good relation relations. that would be problematic. it could be very dangerous for them. i think he has to sort of have the recent, rational approach. and i think it -- i hope it's . i hope we can work something out short of military intervention. >> juan: i think the whole trip has potential, and the key to me is what happens with vladimir putin because if you recall, by the way, if the president wanted china's help, china has not delivered in the way he hoped.
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in part where they have delivered, cutting off supplies. the russians stepped in and made up the deficit. what is putin doing? he is supposed to be pals with trump. okay, we need help with this. it's kind of striking that rex tillerson, secretary of state, was trying to -- i'm hoping things behind the scenes have been going on. trump is the one who said don't won't waste your time. what a change in tone today. >> jesse: it's election day. keeping a close eye on the race for governor in virginia. can president trump help republican ed gillespie pull off a win? polls close soon there. we will have that next. #nosleep i got it... #mouthbreather yep, we've got a mouth breather. well just put on a breathe right strip
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close in a few hours. the race for governor has been contentious between former rnc chair ed gillespie and democrat ralph northam bird president trump threw has support today behind ed gillespie. "gillespie will turn around the high and poor economic performance of virginia." >> i appreciate the president's support very much. if you are going to be governor of the commonwealth of virginia you better be able to work with the president of the united states. >> dana: if gillespie wins, what does it mean for the democratic party. that's the first time i've ever called him mr. gillespie in a long time. >> jesse: he is definitely the underdog. >> dana: we like dogs here. >> jesse: especially the person to my left. i don't think a republican has won the governorship since 2008,
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and the state has gone blue in every presidential election for the last, what, three or four times. it's a blue state at this point. virginians are very concerned about health care, very concerned about the economy. right track, wrong track scenario, the worst it's been into decades. obamacare premiums expected to jump 60% next year. wages are flat and a lot of the rural areas in the state have not really seen the jobs the rest of the state has. gdp growth come up 0.6% last year. national average was about 1.5%. not very good. crime, 484 murders in the. last year. that's, i think, a high of 20 years. violent crime, robbery, rape, all up. the gun issue got a f from the nra. ms-13, there's been a lot of
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misinformation. almost 2,000 ms-13 gang members alone in fairfax county. you mentioned the other day there's a bunch of ms-13 gang members on trial for killing teenagers in that state. it's terrible. if gillespie wins, this will show a few things. one, that you can run as a republican and not completely embrace trump and still win. it also will have a republican in control of the governorship in virginia during the trump reelection, which will be very, very important. and it can show that if he does win, this radical identity politics, as it caused the loss of northam, will be under the microscope. i think the loss will send the democrats nationally into a tailspin. >> greg: if you look at ralph northam, actually not a bad guy. voted for bush twice. he's a veteran. ed gillespie and ralph northam, they are kind of middle of the road. they put the goober in
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gubernatorial. >> dana: [laughs] >> kimberly: that is sexy. >> greg: my big point, nobody leaves the arena of identity politics looking better. this is an arena built by the left and cultivated by the left. sometimes the right has gotten involved. it's made this race close, and it's taken what you might consider to be a decent guy, ralph northam, and kind of permanently put a smear on him. it's like he was a pretty decent candidate who was way ahead. voted for bush, he was a vet. you look at him and you think of the ad, how awful the ad was. it's had a negative rebound effect that is helping gillespi gillespie. it's another example, we've seen it in entertainment, academia, politics. when identity politics enters the room, it's a skunk. and you are stuck with the
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stench as long as you live. >> dana: i want to get juan and kimberly n. >> kimberly: i think i want to touch on the democratic party question because i think this is going to be very critical when we see the outcome of the race because i think it's really going to exacerbate some of the existing problems they're having, that they are losing a bit of their grip on state politics and being able to go in and do the anti-trump thing and win. this to me is a very good sign. republicans, if they can come together and kind of bridge the divide we talked about yesterday. and ed gillespie, i think he's done a masterful job of learning lessons from the left. really taking ownership of the situation, will getting behind him. he's a very good example of kind of a modern-day republican candidate they can appeal to multiple facets of the party. be a closer and win. >> dana: within the margin of error but the democrats did have the leg up. >> juan: it's not substantial. but i think he does have a leg
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up in all the polls that have come back showing that northam has about a three-point edge. it's almost a year since donald trump beat all the pollsters. ed gillespie came very close in his race against mark warner in the senate. it was that close. warner was able to hold him off. the big news here is the robo calls from president trump. gillespie did not bring trump in. he was running a very different campaign. he lost a corey stewart, who was trump's campaign manager in virginia. he started to run more of what greg refers to as identity politics campaign. what about the nfl players kneeling? what about ms-13, like he was the biggest threat to virginia. it is so divisive but on the other hand if gillespie wins, this is the playbook going forward. >> dana: i also -- the media exacerbated the ms-13 ad bigger
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than it was. >> greg: who gave birth to identity politics? >> juan: white america never plays identity politics. >> dana: that's when we've got to go. penn state lost a tough game against michigan state over the weekend but it's what the coach did after the game that's getting a lot of attention. stay right there. but do you take something for your brain. with an ingredient originally found in jellyfish, prevagen is the number one selling brain-health supplement in drug stores nationwide. prevagen. the name to remember.
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you've probably seen me running all over the country in search of our big idaho potato truck. but not any more. i am done with that. ooh, ooh hot - just gonna stay home on the farm, eat a beautiful idaho potato, and watch tv with my dog... tv anncr: the big idaho potato truck pulled into town today and it's really a sight to see. oh man...let's go.... (distant) you comin', boy? sfx: (dog) gulp! woof.
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♪ >> juan: saturday, penn state lost a tough one to michigan state after msu's kicker nailed a field goal as time ran out. for the avid sports fan, the story ends there. cameras caught penn state head coach james franklin sprinting across the field to wrangle his players up demanding they get back out there and shake hands with their opponents. he said "we are going to lose with class and we're going to shake people's hands and give them credit. because they deserve it."
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what do you make of that? >> greg: you know why this is so powerful. it's the opposite of taking a knee. he reminds you of the initial purpose of sports which is sportsmanship. it teaches you fairness, clean play, how to endure hardships. humility, how to endure lost and how to be a good loser and a good winter. this is why i think the nfl is dying right now because the knee as a consequence of the decline of sportsmanship. the nfl is being driven by spectacle, celebrity culture, the coarsening of our culture. we become ruder, louder. this kind of thing just doesn't happen anymore. this is the injection of politics into a venue. politics stresses the differences between people. football and teamwork, you're supposed to be a team. you even have things in common with the other team. you sometimes have more in common with the other team than your own team but what politics does is it stresses the division. that's why when you look at
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this, you go, he's getting the guys to go shake the other guys hands. that's the opposite of everything you see these days. >> kimberly: i think it's excellent, good leadership, example of good sportsmanship, conduct and behavior. the classy and take the wins and losses. you see the character of people when they lose after a tough game. go out there and show you played your best and treat the other team with respect. i think it goes a long way to say, their reputation and team spirit. doing the right thing. i love it. i think it's a great example. >> juan: dana, after dog shows, do you shake the other owners hands? >> dana: i've never been to one. i first saw this black guy i follow on twitter any city and more lax on this tweet than anything ever done. he does a lot of political thing so you can imagine. there is a word within sportsmanship and that's "man." it's about teaching people how to be really good gentlemen. we could use a few more of those
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around this country. the other thing is, he's not just a coach. he's a head coach, and is not just calling plays. i know you hate the term, and a kind of creeps me out. the whole life coach thing. being involved in sports does teach you about life, and those lessons you learn on the field, you will take to the board room or if you are at a table, if you're going to be communicating with somebody. i thought it was powerful and i hope other coaches emulate it. >> juan: he was an assistant coach at maryland and when they do the coin toss, some of the maryland players didn't shake hands. he flipped out. he wasn't the head coach but he said you better shake hands. >> jesse: he was in trouble a couple weeks ago for were sportsmanship himself when he tried to ice the opposing team's kicker after they were winning 56-0 to salvage a shut out. it worked. he apologize for that but i like what he did here. reminds me, my father when he got a job in new york from
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philadelphia. the company out here sent people to interview his squash buddies in philly to see if my dad exhibited good sportsmanship. if he was a cursor or didn't shake hands afterwards, they probably wouldn't have hired him. >> greg: he had a garden? >> juan: what are we going to do with him? before we go, i want to say roy halladay died today in a plane crash. we are sorry to see them go. a terrific man. interesting fashion news from america's fashion icon. yes, greg gutfeld. don't miss it.
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♪ we are the driven... the dedicated... the overachievers. we know our best investment is in ourselves. we don't take no for an answer. we fight for what we want. even for the things that were once a given. going to college... buying a home... and not being in debt for it for the rest of our lives. but we're only as strong as our community. who inspires and pushes us to go further than we could ever go alone. sofi. get there sooner.
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this jacket is military-inspired. i guess now it's good to be inspired by the military? if it's only fashion? god forbid you're actually inspired by actual elements of military service, patriotism, selflessness, bravery. instead be inspired to dress like someone who actually hates such traits prefers to mock service to one's country. the jacket maker also supplies the u.s. military and claims this jacket encompasses expressions of individuality. how individualistic, covering yourself in phony slogans and meaningless symbols. why not slap bumper stickers across your face? in the most expensive city in the nation, manhattan, within the priciest store, you can outfit the trust fund revolutionary that champions the downtrodden, hater of the man, enemy combatant of big business,
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greed and patriarchy. where your hipster jacket to brunch. while dripping cage-free eggs down the front of it. offer 400 bucks. that's a bargain for a suit. now we can spot the loser a mile away. kimberly. >> kimberly: if i see this coming at me, let me tell you they better go the other direction. is there a man done with this? or the high-top man bun? way too expensive. it would be better if it was like 55 bucks. >> dana: in the military, you earn a jacket like that. >> kimberly: it seems like you're trying too hard. >> dana: you don't want to have to really go out and do it. >> greg: on the back and has an anarchy symbol and on the
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front "anarchy means chaos." why can't we steal this jacket. why do i have to pay for it? why can't they break a window and steal the jacket? >> juan: i'm going to be a cranky old man. the jacket is ridiculous. it's been around since i was a kid. people who want to say i am hip, different, antiestablishment. it's a ridiculous jacket. to me, when i walked down the street and i see these people with pants that are torn. i bet they pay a lot of money. for torn pants. i think it's nuts. but it's fashion. >> greg: see if they had one with the collar up for you. >> jesse: i don't like what you said about cage-free eggs. i like cage-free eggs. i think they taste better. they also got the color wrong. if you watch antifa, they are all wearing black.
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if i were a fashion person, i respect bernie's for trying to capitalize on people who hate capitalism. >> greg: we went to find it, it was out this weekend. they claim it's not an entity for jacket. we can't find it, it is no longer at barney's. they refused to acknowledge where this jacket went. >> dana: they are going to be on ebay later on. i came across a couple articles about how politics was the biggest trend at new york fashion week. i guess barney's is just following what people want. >> kimberly: 11 people had stuff about troop. >> dana: they had t-shirts "nevertheless, she persisted." for like $300. >> juan: a lot of women have the "nasty woman" t-shirt. even if it is self-expression,
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>> kimberly: it's time for "one more thing." jesse. >> jesse: thank you. [laughter] trumpeted one of the most trump things ever when he ate with the prime minister of japan. instead of ordering sushi or tempura, some of the best food you could ever have in japan. the man orders a well-done cheeseburger. he locally sourced, the beef was from america apparently. he has the heinz ketchup. well done, mr. president. >> dana: i agree with him on that. order what you want where you are. it's better. well done. it >> kimberly: traveling food issues, like this one gets over there. dana. >> dana: she wasn't pointing at me. this "one more thing" is courtesy of charlie hurt who sent this to me. a labrador retriever who ate at the table with his family in his high chair.
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that's not a golden retriever. why does it say retriever? he was born -- when she eats, the food doesn't make it to her stomach. she has to eat and drink in an upright position. they have to burp her like a baby. that's not a retriever. >> greg: i was not a fan of high chairs. i don't like heights. it's time for... greg's fashion news. that's right. this is at the state dinner in japan with the prime minister. hope hicks ditched her usual dress for a tuxedo and bow tie. that's a stunning look. first lady melania trump or an elegant red valentino ground. donald trump has changed politics in a lot of ways.
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one thing, the hippest dressed political party are the republicans. these women put vogue to shame. >> kimberly: our beautiful first lady, very classy and elegant, should be on the cover of "vogue." >> dana: they might. >> greg: they won't. >> juan: one of my favorite musicians of all time, prince died a year and a half ago. this week, one of his guitars went up for auction. the bids went crazy like it was 1999. a big surprise, the bidding war sent the price skyrocketing to $700,000, the highest amount paid for one of his guitars. less than a jimi hendrix, less of some of the celebrity auction items but on believable. he used the guitar in the '80s and '90s and donated it in 1994. >> kimberly: this morning on "fox & friends," we saw the
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air force, new recruits on "fox & friends." we are big fans of the air force here. take a listen. >> do solemnly swear that i will support and defend the constitution of the united states. so help me god. you are now airmen. >> kimberly: god bless them and thank them for their service. that was the air force secretary who administered the oath. the air force band was on hand to help mark the occasion. fantastic. >> jesse: god bless the air force. >> dana: it is neat they chose "fox & friends" to be a place where they get sworn in. >> kimberly: bands and everything, fantastic. what a lovely show. jesse, anything else? >> jesse: i think we have covered it. >> dana: i would say you want
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to find out what's happening in the election in virginia, you can follow the platforms at fox news, facebook, twitter, facebook fox news.com. >> greetings from washington. i am james rosen joining you from the washington bureau. we are expected to see bret baier life from seoul, south korea. a short time ago we heard his report from the dnc. the president is expected to address the threat from north korea before leaving for china which will be the next leg on his asia tour. he's going to be hitting that topic at the forefront of his trip. we will give you a behind-the-scenes tour of the demilitarized zone between the two countries that puts this dangerous stand out and center. bret will speak to the head of u.s. pacific command about how ready the u.s. is to face nuclear threat and we will have the days'
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