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tv   The Five  FOX News  April 5, 2018 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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congressman leonard lance of new jersey. on the house energy and commerce committee, the committee that will be questioning, pay-per-view event, the way it's going right now, mark zuckerberg of facebook. thank you, everybody. "the five" is next. ♪ >> kimberly: i'm kimberly guilfoyle with juan williams, congressman jason chaffetz, kennedy, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five" ." president trump appears this afternoon at a event in west virginia after ordering the national guard to the mexican border to combat illegal immigration and drug smuggling. he remains firm on his plans to secure the border with our military as the situation, he says, has reached a point of crisis. >> we have to have strong borders. we're going to have the wall. we're going to have our wall and we are going to get it very strongly. the military is going to be
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building some of that. we cannot let people enter our country. we have no idea who they are, what they do, where they came from. we have no idea what their records are. we are working out systems now, and we called out the national guard. we are doing a real job. i will tell you what, the laws of this country have to be strengthened and toughened. >> kimberly: the pentagon hasn't determined whether troops will be armed. the move drawing heavy criticism from the left who claim this is a rallying cry to the presidents base. >> this president doesn't plan out anything, doesn't coordinated. he is using our troops as a political ploy so we can boast his numbers with his voters. >> i don't see the urgency but there clearly is a political imperative. political urgency might be different than national security urgency. >> sham might be the word you're looking for. >> border security is an issue that won him lots of support
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during the campaign, and he explained to that base again. >> this is more about the politics, given the how. the wheels have kind of come off for the president on the daca side of things when you get ann coulter and many on the conservative, hard right saying what the hell is your problem? what are you doing? that rattled him. >> kimberly: greg, isn't a rallying call to the base? ann coulter. >> greg: she runs the whole world. there are two angles they are working. the left is calling it security theater. security theater. it is left-wing activist theater because the illegal border crossing was manufactured by an activist group. the caravan was organized to create a confrontation. but trump was able to stop the confrontation by creating a metaphorical wall, i.e., himself, saying i am sending in the army.
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the whole thing capitulated in mexico cooperating. he won this round in a highly visual manner. the new media angle is this wasn't a story until trump needed one. nobody ever knew about this caravan. well, you're absolutely right. you figured out how trump worked. he takes a story that the media ignores and then he makes it his story. look at kate steinle. he takes something that is very visual that people understand, and he makes it a national stor story. much like what fox news does. we tackle stories the rest of the media doesn't cover. >> kimberly: one follow-up. very good so far. how about the fact that none of the troops, not sure they are going to be armed. i don't like that. >> greg: i don't know if it's necessary. i think he has already proved the point. hasn't he already, he's a metaphorical wall. the way he responded was all that was necessary. security theater.
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trump's activists theater. >> kimberly: kennedy, perhaps they're going to link arms at the border. >> kimberly: may be. why have past presidents sent the national guard in the first place? maybe president bush was worried that terrorists were going to pour over the border. perhaps president obama was worried because of the drug war and the escalating violence and homicides on the border. this isn't the first president who has done that. you wouldn't know that by the hysterical reaction on the left. anytime you're going to spend a bunch of money like this, you better have a point to it because when president bush sent 6,000 national guard troops, it cost about half a billion dollars. it's a lot of money and it's money we don't have. i also understand it's a way of the president looking like he's doing something because congress is not going to give him money for the wall. they may give him a little bit of seed money. $1.5 billion isn't that much. this is the only other thing he can do to show that he is doing something.
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we also have to ask, what kind of a hellhole is honduras? why are people leaving in drove droves? taking a perilous journey through mexico. the other question is what is mexico's immigration policy? is the president putting pressure on them to do their work for that leg of the journe journey? >> kimberly: congressman. >> jason: the president is doing exactly what he told america he would do. he needs to lock down the border and get rid of the rewards and incentives. i am sick of tired of the people in the left thing this is your show and he is just playing to its base. over the last two years, more than 100,000 miners have come across the border. when you are an unaccompanied minor and you come across the border, we don't have any vetting to figure out who we are handing you too. you have 12-year-old girls coming across the border and we are handing them off to who knows who. why isn't the left yelling and
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screaming about human trafficking and the scourge of drugs. these aren't all people coming to just make life better for their families. these are people who are purposely moving kids into america. some of them are going into gangs. some of them are going to perverts. you don't know who they are going to. it's time the left actually realized we shouldn't be complicit in allowing this trafficking of children. >> kimberly: an important point and it such a real proble problem. just yesterday they made the announcement that 99 unaccompanied minors, they were identified as members of ms-13, they were taken into custody by the president, had them arreste arrested. you really have to be careful in terms of why wouldn't you? it is not mean-spirited. it is looking for justice and making sure you do not let people come in, unaccompanied minors, human trafficking, gang or cartel elements coming in.
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>> kennedy: we can't rely on the government for all of the vetting. at all that we have proper vetting processes in place because congress won't do its job. >> jason: you can't continue to house them. you get to the overflow situation, the bad guys know. they have to release them and they go out. >> juan: i do think this is theater. absolutely theater. launched by president trump in a moment when he is going into chaos at the white house. sending out tweets about everything, blaming everybody. blames president obama, blames the mexican government, blames california. in this situation, greg, i think it was buzzfeed or vice or somebody who called attention to it. "fox & friends" picked up on it. then the president sees that he reacts to it. and then blows it way out of
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proportion. these people were never intended to, cross the border except to possibly apply for what is quite legal, called, guess what, you know, they wanted some kind of asylum. >> kimberly: not for ms-13 gang members. >> juan: this is all part of the vilification -- >> kimberly: it is not vilification. you don't want to deal with the facts. you say that the president is squirming. squirming at 51%. the highest -- >> juan: 39% in real clear politics average. >> kimberly: how about rasmussen? >> greg: they were off by one point in the election. don't spread lies like that. that's a lie. >> juan: rasmussen, it doesn't really bow call polling.
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it doesn't get people who have cell phones, disappoints its half the. >> kennedy: juan, let's say it is theater, and it might be. the president, like i said, looking like he's doing something. but there is a perceptual effect in that immigration, legal immigration has slowed down since the president took the oath of office. >> juan: it's at a 46-year low low. >> kennedy: there was an uptick. with daca uncertainty. you have four border states. new mexico, texas, arizona, they have commended the president and said thank you. we welcome the help. california is very much on the fence. don't be surprised if there is a massive resistance to deploying the national guard in california. don't you think that creates the perception that california is the place to go because the
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border -- >> kimberly: juan, let me get this in. >> kennedy: like it or not, it alters people's behavior. >> kimberly: and other city in california voting to support the lawsuit against the state's sanctuary law. the president addressed it today. >> if you look in california and you see what's happening, it's an incredible phenomenon because sanctuary cities, it's the worst. it's basically a city to protect a lot of people that are bad people. really bad. >> kimberly: juan, your response. >> juan: the president didn't get the money in the budget to build a wall. promised the wall. ann coulter and people on the far right of said what happened to your pledge? now we see him reacting impulsively. you point out by the way these folks have no authority to arrest or detain any illegal immigrants. kennedy points out we don't have the money. we are spending money like oh, there is tons of money.
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>> jason: added hundreds of billions of dollars to the domestic budget. they do for the military. >> juan: in other words, he is changing the terms. i noticed mexico is not paying for any of this. to me, this is theater. but you guys apparently are buying into it. >> greg: can i respond? it's not theater when an actual caravan turns around. what you are seeing, and this is important as an overall trend when you look at why donald trump's numbers are taking up. you look at the trend. the rasmussen poll, which is legitimate. the reason why it's up ticking is because he represents a certain assumption about law and order. what you saw with the caravan was the old school meeting the new school. the old school, hard-line, no b.s., send in the army trump goes up against the social
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justice grievance culture that's been around for years which speaks of amnesty and speaks of sanctuary cities. to quote juan, guess what, trump walked all over them. he won. he stood his ground. i will never use the phrase reagan asked but it reminds me of reagan. in 1969 when he sent the national guard into the rides in berkeley and established hot curfew and refused to negotiate. nobody remembers the negotiators. they remember the people who stood their ground for america. america first, not america last. >> juan: the caravan has been coming up every year for the last several years. >> kimberly: return to sender. >> juan: the president congratulated mexico for helping him deal with it. >> greg: he got them to the table. [all speaking]
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>> kennedy: this is a part of the story that, it's painful to admit that part of the reason central america is decimated is because of the drug war. head has not done anything committing these resources, it's not done anything about the demand for drugs in this country. like it or not, for better or worse. >> juan: don't tell the truth like that. the audience -- >> greg: the audience. you said something different yesterday. you said heroin is all coming from prescriptions. >> juan: heroin from prescriptions? no, no, no. >> greg: jesse brought up that an overwhelming percentage of overdoses are caused by street drugs. 90% of heroin comes from mexico. you dismissed that. watch the post. >> juan: i am telling you that the ds as most of the illegal drugs in the country come from legal points of entry. people hide them on themselves. >> greg: 90% of heroin.
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>> kimberly: drug smuggling handled by the direction of the cartel. >> juan: the threat to us as americans are prescription drugs, the opioids. that is what is killing us. they are killing five times the number of people killed by cocaine, heroin. >> kennedy: you know what happens when marijuana is legal. not only are there far fewer prescriptions for morphine and hydrocodone. there are fewer opioid deaths. the rate of overdose traps by 25%. >> juan: you are not going to get an argument for me. >> kimberly: the true marijuana legalization lobbyist over there. >> greg: demonizing people experiencing cancer pain by saying that opioids are evil. there you are. >> kimberly: ahead, what started the russian investigation. the chairman of the house intelligence committee wants answers, and he is threatening legal action if he doesn't get them. that's next.
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♪ >> juan: have you ever wondered what sparked the
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russian investigation? devin nunes is taking a new fight with the fbi and doj in order to find out. the hot chairman of the house intelligence committee sent a letter to rod rosenstein and christopher wray demanding the turnover the unredacted memo that kick started the trump campaign. he is threatening to enforce the if it's not provided. oversight committee chair trey gowdy would also like answers. >> most of what i have read is in the public domain but i really want to know what information did you view credible enough to launch a pretty serious counterintelligence investigation? when did you learn, how did you vent it? how did you determine whether it was reliable. all of that is in a paragraph i can't read. >> juan: republicans want answers. the big question is, where did the investigation start? a new book alleging john brennan played a prominent role in getting it going? congressman jay , what do you t?
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>> jason: the documents have been in place since august of last year. it's a two-page document. it's not a massive file. it's a two page document. the committee was told they could see it. trey gowdy went to see it and they redacted a bunch. then they went through these arguments. trey gowdy went back over there at they agreed to unveil it. this one paragraph is redacted. it begs the question why. it is the genesis of the investigation. the part about john brennan is kind of mysterious because here is john brennan, head of the cia, goes and talks to harry reid less than 48 hours and harry reid sends a letter to the fbi demanding they do this investigation. what is brennan's role? you have brennan, the fbi director, the cia is involved. it really does beg the question
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why. i think it's legitimate for the oversight of the intelligence operations and the fbi to say how did you start this? trey gowdy is exactly right. they should be able to see it. >> juan: to what end. if it's redacted, i guess it's the national security issue. >> jason: they have all the security. gowdy and devin nunes have all the security clearances to be able to see it. go into a secure facility. >> juan: devin nunes didn't challenge the authorization of fisa. he didn't have. now he seems like he has trouble with the very tool. >> jason: some of this stuff is a closed case. it begs the question, why won't the intelligence community, why won't the fbi allow the investigators to see it? if the american people are paying for it, then they should be able to see it if they have
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the proper security clearance. why won't they let them see this document? in a secure facility, let them see it. >> kimberly: i think it is suspect. it's inappropriate. this is the principle the government was founded on. we have representation in congress. they have every right to be able to see it. no one has been able to proffer any explanation to say why they shouldn't. that's why people are asking these important questions. we shouldn't have this kind of secrecy especially as it relates to this. we need to know and they have the right to be able to see it. why isn't it happening? i don't know why rosenstein didn't recuse himself from the beginning. he is more involved to do with this than sessions. because of all the conflicts he's handed being directly involved in the russian collusion thing, the hillary clinton investigation from all of it. tentacles throughout and it suspect. >> juan: kennedy, when you look at the situation, you have the fbi, cia, people saying we
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don't have proof. guess what, we might not want the russians to know what we knew about george poppel papad. >> kennedy: chances are russia already knows. it is shocking to think the entire investigation was launched because george papadopoulos was drunk. if you had a special counsel launched every time someone was hammered in d.c. and was going on about some internal conspiracy theory, the government would have gone broke decades ago. it's a little terrifying. you talk about collusion, as we get deeper and deeper in the investigation, that seems like a flimsy reach. it appears as though you have the director of the cia meeting with the senate minority leader who then goes to the fbi director and implores him to start an investigation into something that at this point, if
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you take those facts, it seems kind of manufactured. if it's not manufactured, if there is substance they are, that if we can't see it and we should be able to, we should be able to come as americans have that transparency. if we can't see it, our elected officials, the ones who have the highest level of clearance should be able to go into those secure facilities and read it. >> juan: i don't think they have the authority to read fisa warrants. some of that is -- >> jason: doesn't that scare you? >> juan: you said they have clearance. i don't think they can. >> jason: that's a different subject than the initiation documents. >> juan: may include some of the same information. greg. >> greg: further proof of emotional officials who want to do anything to make sure trump without and hillary within. through the tarmac incident, calling an investigation a matter. these are all the same people with this irrational fear that something awful was going to
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happen. we have to settle this perhaps with a penalty kick. this nunes thing is counter programming to the collusion. they throw up collusion and nunes does this. the bottom line, to kennedy's point, there's as much evidence in april 2018 of collusion as there was in january 2017. watching the media trying to create a watergate out of this is like watching a champ do a crossword puzzle. it's not going to happen. let it go. it's like soccer. it is 0-0 at half. >> jason: i love soccer. >> greg: i know, jason. >> jason: it's a beautiful game. >> greg: but it is 0-0 at half half. stay high that's why he gave you the thing about the penalty kick. >> greg: scoring doesn't matter? >> juan: one thing i want to
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say is why is nunes using this to try to get money from his donors? i don't get it. why be politicizing it? >> kennedy: they all politicize it. they all do. >> juan: some employees at google going to war with our government. as a putting politics before national security? that's next on "the five" ." after a dvt blood clot... i sure had a lot on my mind. my 30-year marriage... ...my 3-month old business... plus...what if this happened again? i was given warfarin in the hospital, but wondered, was this the best treatment for me? so i made a point to talk to my doctor. he told me about eliquis. eliquis treats dvt and pe blood clots and reduces the risk of them happening again. not only does eliquis treat dvt and pe blood clots. eliquis also had significantly less major bleeding than the standard treatment.
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♪ steve arce i would like to apologize for playing with the red hot chili peppers in the earlier segment. we will never do that again. my how the world has changed. thousands of google employees signed a letter chastising their company for working with pentagon drones so only bad guys
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get killed in war, not civilian civilians. it could change war forever. these employees think that's evil. go figure. how does a company like google thrive? it helps to exist in a country with the world's greatest defenses which enables freedom to thrive. it helps that over half a century ago american companies made up of young men and women helped us when maxim world wars. without that, we will be speaking german. during world war ii, u.s. industries produce more than -- 300,000 planes, 100,000 tanks and 15 million guns. all of this from the home front. how is the home front now? these childlike google heads think they can live forever in a silicone bubble immune to the real world's risk and responsibility is unaware of the sacrifices grandparents and great parents made to enable the company lifestyle.
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terrorists refine their technology and plan the next 9/11. these kids at google think their expertise should only be used for getting directions. thank god they weren't around in the 1940s. kimberly. drones are going to be used to target bad guys so you have less collateral damage. how can you be against that? >> kimberly: it doesn't make sense. when you look at the medical ideology, eric schmidt, running google. the hillary clinton campaign events. anyway, they go through this whole background checking. it's pretty much lockstep over there in terms of progressive ideals. they think it's the right idea to be on the right side of it and say we are against war. to have this kind of position. they don't understand what they are protesting against. they are protesting at the pentagon or department of defense, anything like that. it is helping you be safe. cyber security.
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why would they be opposed to it? not very well thought out. >> greg: kennedy, i could see this in a world without terror and toxic existential ideologies. we are in a different kind of more. it's not a war on a battlefield. it's around and waiting for the opportunity. should they be arrested? >> kennedy: it's a little authoritarian. i will say there is merit to being antiwar. i understand that and i understand the desire and the threat to use technology for positive means for bringing people out of poverty, educating people. that's all well and good. i don't have a problem with that. i agree with them that the marriage of big government with big technology is really scary. >> greg: in a good way? >> kennedy: will know. weapons of war and surveillance
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combined. essentially we are powerless. the second amendment is important because people can defend themselves. >> greg: with drones. you could defend yourself with drone. >> kennedy: does everybody get an armed drone? can we target people with precision? my question is not how can this be used, what's the intention. the intention is almost always good. it is how can it be misused? how can it be misused? >> greg: you can argue that with every technology. >> kennedy: i pose the question, what government functions are acceptable? >> greg: excellent question. jason, perhaps you could answer it. don't mention soccer. >> jason: these google people are showing a degree of immaturity. it's looking at the national guard, the men and women who serve our nation, they don't have a specific political ideology. look at some naughty kid at google who is trying to say our technology is better than that.
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we shouldn't allow you to have it. i believe in peace through strength. the reason the united states is the greatest country on the planet is because we've had hard people do difficult things and there's a price to freedom. they don't want to participate in that? they don't want to use their expertise to keep us the greatest country on the planet? that is so wrong. >> juan: i don't understand. the young people, i don't know if they are young, they could be eric schmitz age. people at google are saying you can't outsource responsibility for your technology. what kennedy says is right. what happens and people start using this for evil purposes and you say oh this is what's going on with facebook allowing people to come in and they create these things becoming more of a issue. in this case, their motto says don't be evil. >> greg: it is hypocritical. >> juan: in this age.
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i am surprised at you, greg. you have been hard on artificial intelligence saying that it can be used to hurt us as human beings. now you are saying no, just let all artificial intelligence come all technology fall into the hands of people whose job it is to kill people. >> greg: what i am saying is if this helps make weaponry more precise on the battlefield, you will save innocent lives, civilians. will pool to have things like dresden where you have to bomb entire cities. you have a drone out in front of somebody's window waiting for that terrorist and when that person goes out, it zaps it. >> kimberly: like a bug zapper. >> kennedy: we saw under president obama how much he misused drones and technology. speaking of a republican or democratic president, if hillary clinton were president with these google employees manufacturing the same thing. >> juan: they signed a huge
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letter, thousands of them signed at. they are upset about for example getting involved with the conservative c pack in those things. >> greg: it's a political thing. we have to move on. i'm getting yelled at. imagine if chappaquiddick happened today, new film investigates the infamous crash. that's next. . do not misjudge quiet tranquility with the power of 335 turbo-charged horses lincoln mkx, more horsepower than the lexus rx350 and a quiet interior from which to admire them. the lincoln spring sales event is here. for a limited time get zero percent apr on the lincoln mkx. hurry in today to your lincoln dealer. -oh! -very nice. now i'm turning into my dad.
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♪ >> jason: five decades ago a deadly accident would forever change the legacy of the kennedy family dynasty. a new film opens tomorrow that revisits chappaquiddick. here's a look. >> mr. kennedy. >> what the hell happened, teddy? >> it was an accident.
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i was driving. >> a story like this could dominate the headlines for week weeks. >> chief, we've got a body. >> a dead body holds a lot of secrets. >> could be the difference between guilt and innocence. we need to be in control. >> jason: that night, that 28-year-old passenger with senator kennedy passed away and it took senator kennedy nearly ten hours before he contacted police. kennedy, is this something you want to see? >> kennedy: i spoke with byron allen and he said there were powerful people on the left trying to get him to stop the release. there are still people trying to maintain that families legacy, and there've been a lot of apologists and accusations of coverups for years about the story. it's tragic because a woman lost her life. we will see if this film sheds any light on what really
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happened. and how family can institutionally insulate itself from justice. >> jason: juan, is this something you want to see? >> juan: i am interested. i remember my mom telling me. she was a big democrat, kennedy supported. after this she said she could never vote for him. that was telling to me. i am interested because i don't know the story and it is a politically intriguing story because it looks like much of the reason they didn't go in the ten hours you mentioned, they were trying to create a cover-up and save his political career. he had been elected senate majority whip. i guess he was in that minority. but the web. secondly he was the front runner for the '72 nomination in the democratic party. there was a lot going on. i must say i am reminded that when there was a book about ronald reagan ronald reagan and alzheimer's and the like, than the right came out and they were defensive and said it's not true. we don't want this book out. now you have a book about the
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kennedys and it is the left-wing saying we don't want this. bob shrum and the other kennedy acolytes. i would like to know the truth. i hope it's a good movie. i hope it's more than just left versus right warfare. >> jason: kimberly, this is an important part of our political history. this guy was on a trajectory to become the next president of the united states. >> kimberly: so much fascination and interest in it. also as a former prosecutor, i think who was allowed to testify, who wasn't, suggestions that perhaps she was alive for two hours in the car, the positioning of her body, searching, looking for pockets of air. prosecution wouldn't let them testify to that fact. i think it's good they made this. >> jason: greg, that would happen today, can you imagine what would happen. >> greg: i don't know. what i am wondering, the question that bugs me is why did
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it take so long? why did it take so long for this movie to be made when you consider how many tv shows, documentaries and movies have been made about watergate in which there was an event in which no one died and no one was killed. that water was much more interesting to the media than the water that killed mary jo. i find it interesting. why the media thought this wasn't a big story for so long and they waited perhaps until he passed away to do this movie. who knows? >> kennedy: i think that's it. i think that's a huge part of the timing. the writer getting started. >> jason: it's got a great cast. "chappaquiddick" opens friday. if you are not against our president, robert de niro doesn't want to hear from you. the actors new rant on trump supporters coming up next.
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♪ >> kennedy: welcome to kennedy's dance party. bobby de niro rarely does interviews without dropping f-bombs on president trump. he voiced major disdain for trump supporters.
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saying about roseanne barr i didn't know she was supporting trump but i have no interest in it. beyond trying to see what another person's point of view. things happening in our country are so bad and it comes from trump so i don't care about roseanne. they want that, find and we have real issues. greg, can you translate? i found it to be incoherent. >> greg: it is depressing to see a once great actor diminished to a blithering hack. he is being honest. he doesn't want the conversation. he wants his opinion heard so you can ignore the simpering gasbag he has become or find him entertaining which i do. at one point he advocated physical violence. the things he is doing, eliminating words, it means there's no step between anger and violence. he doesn't want to have that step which is a little bit interesting. >> kennedy: it is.
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juan, i understand people are dug in on both sides. one of the points roseanne raised was it's kind of obvious our characters would have been trump supporters. 20 years later, their lives are not better. for half of that time almost president obama was the commander in chief. a lot of working-class people in the country were not helped. so is there a point that a sitcom can make, having characters who are diametrically opposed politically? >> juan: i would encourage it. i think it is a miniature of "the five." we have actual discussion. it's all good stuff. i will say in de niro's defense, that there's a option, he was encouraging to people to go out and vote. >> kimberly: hypocritical. his career, all the money made on playing violent characters who use weapons. charming, isn't it?
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>> jason: my wife and i were at a fancy black tie affair and we got to meet mr. de niro. he gave me the wet, cold, dead fish handshake. >> greg: he knew you liked soccer. he said no, i don't have time. >> kennedy: guess what's coming up. "one more thing" up next. driving bonus check every six months i'm accident free. and i don't share it with mom! right, mom? righttt. safe driving bonus checks. only from allstate. switching to allstate is worth it.
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♪ >> kimberly: hello there, yes. it looks so good. get your hand out of the shot. someone take them away. it is time now for "one more thing." i will begin with myself and royalty because it's time for kimberly's oriole news. lifetime, highly acclaimed channel, has a thing for charming movies, because i like them, so i want to say cheesy. remember william and kate back in 2011? they are back at it with carey and meghan, a royal romance. greg gutfeld and i will watch it together. fabulous, baby. we will share the ground back and forth. we've got a first look. take a listen. >> i'm meghan. >> harry. you look lovely. >> is it true about you and
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prince harry? >> she makes me happy, so to hell with tradition! >> kimberly: i cannot wait. your heart is in the shot. you are out of control. i demand that you take him away. you got to watch it. >> greg: now two important things. it is time for... greg's is this real. i'm asking the audience at home and the people here at "the five" to look at this video. what do you look see is what seems to be a cat floating with balloons and a basket. but i'm asking all of you. is this real? could somebody be holding it from behind the wall? i've been watching this for days and i can't quite find out if it's real or not. anybody? >> kimberly: thanks god somebody didn't bb the balloons. >> kennedy: that would have been so sad. >> greg: it's not real. i think somebody is behind the wall holding the thing. >> kimberly: cats are quite
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smart. it's a little kitty suicide. >> jason: cats always land on their feet. they'll be fine. >> kimberly: can't get the time back we lost without winning "one more thing." juan? >> juan: that doesn't stop him from becoming a baseball star. watch him. the high school catcher from tennessee lost his arm at 19 months. now video of him playing has gone viral and attracted attention for major league teams. the baltimore orioles invited him to the oriole park at camden yards to talk with coaches and players, even god's own jersey. by the way, if you doubt that a one armed baseball player can make it to the majors, think about this. remember, yankee pitcher jim abbott, he played ten seasons, even threw a no-hitter in 1993 with one arm. good luck to you, luke. you are an inspiration to us all. >> kimberly: god bless him. kennedy? >> kennedy: if there's one thing we love almost as much as inspiring stories, as baby pandas. look at this little guy. his zookeeper is trying to clean
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the panda enclosure by the 6-month-old panda cub is like, "no, i'm going to play with the broom and you're going to be my friend and you will pay attention to be." it is so cute. it is so fun. they just put little saddles on him, they have panda rides. >> greg: after that, the panda mauled him to death. >> kennedy: that's right. we didn't show it because we wanted to leave on a happy note. >> jason: the masters have started in augustine georgia. there is a tradition to start on pack -- this is jack nicklaus' grandson and he hits a hole-in-one asked mike this is one of his greatest moments. he would gladly turn in his six green jacket to experience that with his grand son. he also had a hole-in-one, that is so exciting. he goes to the hospital but after 17 holes, e, key is leading the masters today. still on the course. look at that.
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ouch. went to the hospital but he leads the masters. >> greg: he learned a listen. >> kimberly: greg loves golf. >> greg: i hate golf. >> kimberly: i know. [laughter] never miss an episode of "the five" ." "special report" up next. hi, bret. bret is a great golfer. >> bret: president trump has a caravan of central american migrants bound for the u.s. has largely broken up, as national guard troops had to the border. more complications for the president's embattled epa chief as the white house says it is reviewing the situation, and more deaths in what some see as a deepening crisis for u.s. military aviation. this is a "special report." ♪ good evening and welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. president trump's getting a shout out to mexico tonight. he's crediting officials with breaking up a caravan of central americans aiming to cross into the u.s. at the mexican border. this comes as the

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