tv Tucker Carlson Tonight FOX News April 18, 2018 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT
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spent with husband, child, friend, or a parent. >> martha: well said, from barbara bush herself from a commencement address. thank you so much for being with us. that's our story for the evenin evening. tucker carlson begins now in washington. ♪ >> tucker: good evening, and welcome to "tucker carlson tonight." i'm mark steyn, in fort tucker tonight. illegal immigration is turning into a crisis across the countr country. and it is not because we lack laws, but because those laws are being ignored. according to new statistics from the department of homeland security, doesn't of gang members, including gang members of ms-13 are prowling the streets because century city's let them go free. it two-thirds the release gang members were in california. apparently, that's the only problem with illegal immigrant
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criminals is that they don't have the right to vote yes. meanwhile, in massachusetts, an illegal immigrant working as an uber driver raped a passenger and has no flood back to ghana. and in washington, neil gorsuch just sided with the court's liberals to strike down a law ordering the deportation of immigrants who commit violent crimes. he is an attorney and immigration advocate, and he joins us. this a victim, she has made her name public. because she now basically has no where to go in the courts. what is the deal with that? who is to blame? >> this is obviously a big mess all around. a first question, why was goober even employing at this undocumented person? >> >> mark: they employ a lot of
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illegal aliens. speak out that in itself, i know that they are under contract. we know that when you get a job, when they sent the bill for this case for a rape case, they only set it for $10,000. anyone in the legal field will tell you that is unbelievably low, especially for this. >> mark: but it is large for massachusetts because only last year, a massachusetts judge gave a bail of $2500 to a dominican gang banger who assaulted a boston college student, and he then fled. >> it is becoming a pattern. they cannot say that they were totally unaware of these types of circumstances, especially with foreign nationals. and then the question of detainees. there is some he said, she said about who set it and who did not follow up on it.
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but this is the bottom line and of our problem. remember, by definition of the statute, it is a voluntary request. asking the police or whoever is involved to hold this person. in massachusetts, because it is the sanctuary jurisdiction, they did not do that. but even if they were not, that is a problem because if i.c.e. really wants to take someone off the streets and they have reason to do so, they need to get to a warrant, which requires a finding of probable cause. >> mark: but in this case, in other words, you need probable cause for someone, a warrant for someone who is not even in the country. let's not let these massachusetts authorities off the hook that easily. at this detainer was sent to local police, who then sent it o the district court, and the
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district court basically declined it to pass it on to the county attorney. isn't this the culture in massachusetts of a sanctuary state, where in effect, this guy, like the guy last year, we are getting to this aware illegal immigrant uber a drivers, who commit rape, not quite a separate category of crime, but they are getting there. just like the guy last year who treated it differently, from say a massachusetts native, some guy who got off the boat. >> it is not necessarily the culture in massachusetts. what it is, it is the state law. because the massachusetts supreme court, they ruled that statewide, no matter what local police or law enforcement officials believe or think it, statewide, that these local jurisdictions cannot hold people while awaiting it i.c.e. because they were concerned about potential fourth amendment concerns. so even if there wasn't this back and forth.
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>> mark: how -- how does the fourth amendment supply to someone who shouldn't even be in in the country that has the fourth amendment? because the way that the massachusetts court applied it, they were looking at the detention as an arrest. and it's ends when the local jurisdiction releases them. and under this, their thinking, if you hold them again for another 48 hours, which is what detainers do, that constitutes a second arrest, and therefore, that's where you would have fourth amendment concerns. that is their reasoning. >> mark: so their reasoning is that with 7 billion people on the planet, and the sky, who is back in ghana, has a pal who would like to come to massachusetts and rape a woman, he knows that he is covered by the fourth amendment, even though he is in a country that doesn't have the fourth amendment. >> i wouldn't say that, but i think it is important to know this, what i think everyone should know, whether you are in
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favor of sanctuary cities or no not, issues about 100,000 detainers a year. okay? of that number, in 2015, which is the year where we have these statistics, only 61% were not followed up on in any way. there was no call to the local jail. they didn't show up. nobody arrived to pick them up. only 15%, and that is 1-5, resulted in deportation. so if they were serious about this, of homeland security was taking it seriously, they would get the criminal warrant. there is no belief system that it is their decision. it is the law. >> mark: well, thank you for explaining that it is in effect just meaningless a bureaucratic mumbo-jumbo. >> that's right. >> mark: voluntary, great. you should see what's going on in european countries, what
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americans think of as super peaceful. a new story and politico says that granada has become part of daily life in sweden. a rape -- and last year, and stockholm, muslim extremist murdered five people by plowing his stolen truck into the cities -- colonist with rebel media. great to have you with us, katie. sweden is in a hell of a state. basically, people's perception of sweden is about 40 years out of date now. >> that's so true. you know, people still imagine sweden as this idyllic place. lots of mountains. snow topped mountains. you know, everybody skipping down the streets with their pigtails. and i was there quite recently. it and i found it to be a very
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different place indeed. there's about 62 no-go zones in sweden, where the police feared to go, where the ambulances can't respond to emergencies, and where fire engines have to be taken by police because the fire engines are attacked. so really, the gangs are establishing themselves. they are keeping the police out. and hand grenades, which you can buy for as little as $30, being used as a kind of warning device to keep those people out. >> mark: now you mentioned those no-go zones. every time we mention these on fox, the government indignantly denied that they exist. so we should say that they are on official no-go. i went to one of them in rosen garda, where there is sort of a loan police station it is like an armed fortress. you can dial, nobody is home, if
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you ever actually go to the police for anything, you can't get in the building. sweden has undergone a -- it was basically an ethnically homogenous society, in which swedes had predicted to become a minority in their own country by 2050. that is an extraordinary transformation. >> you know, there is a population of about 10 million swedes. irritatingly enough, sweetest people are exceptionally good looking. and that really annoys me, but anyway, they took this very perfect population, and they brought in 170,000 migrants. and those migrants were from countries that we know about. we know the sort of things like go on in those countries. and then we wonder why is it that sweden has turned into a place where swedes themselves are desperate to leave. i hear stories all the time of swedes that want to get out of sweden because it is too violen violent. norway says it doesn't want to
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become sweden. and what really bugs me is the media will not be honest about it. they talk about these individuals, these migrants, they talk about them as the new swedes. well, guess what, you can't put a blonde wig on them and turn them into a suite. it doesn't work like that. >> mark: now, it is particularly hard on the women. i talked to a young lady. some girls who have been sexually assaulted at up concer concert. there is an incredible level of sexual assault going on in a country that we think of as of still being far more peaceful than the united states, or the u.k., or most other countries. >> yeah, and we should stop thinking that. it is naive. we have imported half of the middle east to sweden, and as a result, the men there particularly are behaving like men in the middle east. 43% of rapes that happen happen
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to children in that country. and they have the second-highest rape rates of anyone. and they will have elections, and in september, the liberals will be forced out, and actually, the conservative -- >> mark: we have to leave it there, katie. thanks for coming on. 11 republicans in the house of representatives has sent a letter to the justice department, calling for the criminal investigations of a -- wait for it to -- james comey, hillary clinton, andrew mccabe, and loretta lynch. chief national correspondent ed henry has more on that. add. >> market, good to see you. attorney general jeff sessions still does not appear to be moving quickly enough on alleged abuses by the fbi and justice department for the liking of top advisors to president trump. so congressman and ten other house republicans have not taken the initiative to take this to
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the fbi. and it to -- he was tasked by the attorney general's to evaluate what needs to be criminal charges for actions like abuse of a fisa obama officials. at the top of their list for potential charges as you mentioned, hillary clinton, for using fusion gps to discuss payments from her presidential campaign. it not to disclose with top officials, spying on the former trump advisor. there is no merit to this claim and republicans must be acting up here because they are scared about the upcoming midterms. that is their view. also people like peter strzok and lisa page, the antitrust text messages, seeming to reveal a bias. former fbi achieved james comey also a target for signing three phis applications without disclosing the funding from the clinton camp for the dossier as well as the fact that he drafted
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and exoneration statements months before clinton's fbi interview. that appears to contradict testimony to congress. he only made the decision to not charge her after she was questioned by the fbi. his former number two, also for leaks to the media. classified info got out from the release of those memos that comey put together. he is confident that he will be exonerated. here is where it gets interesting. after comey told the view that he thinks mccabe is a good person but he found that he lied, mccabe fired back. it's not true. and that comey is simply not being honest. so you've got the former men now terming stomach turning on each other. >> thanks for that, add. i will believe it when i see it. waiting for donald trump to have a new reality show.
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speaking of james comey, cashing in. and it hitting up "the view." and waits until you see the bizarre standing ovation he got. that's coming up next on "tucker carlson tonight" ." ♪ with esurance photo claims, you could have money for repairs within a day. wow! that was really fast. that's insurance for the modern world. esurance, click or call.
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you know what's not awesome? gig-speed internet. when only certain people can get it. let's fix that. let's give this guy gig- really? and these kids, and these guys, him, ah. oh hello. that lady, these houses! yes, yes and yes. and don't forget about them. uh huh, sure. still yes! xfinity delivers gig speed to more homes than anyone. now you can get it, too. welcome to the party. the one james comey's epic cry for attention is taking him on a grand tour of the tv world. but he is getting mixed reception. last night on the late show with steve colbert, the former fbi director was treated like a
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visiting monarch. >> why would you fire the fbi director who is leading the russian investigation? >> because you are leaving the russia investigation. >> he tweeted out me probably 50 times. i have been gone for a year. i'm like a breakup he can't get over. he wakes up in the morning, thinks about me. >> mark: i think somebody wrote that line for him. not everybody was so kind. this morning, he was hit hard by today's savanna and meghan mccain. >> it feels like you might have to be forced to settle. you might have a little bit of anger left over and a little bit of bitterness. >> what do you say to people like me who think that you're just doing this for money and attention? >> i think that maybe j. edgar hoover is rolling over his stomach and his grave over the things of that you are revealin revealing. >> mark: we will try to confirm that from the rolling
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jay edgar coming into better to do that then that the host of fox and friends and his own show on fox news radio. 9:00 a.m. eastern every morning. good to have you with us. what do you make of his talk at? >> i just saw you ten hours ago. you had no necktie. we were on the couch. and now we are on comey watch. >> mark: what is this? he doesn't wear a tie, and now suddenly, you have taken your child. clear off and put a necktie on. >> i don't know how to tie the knot. >> mark: he is going for the dark shirt. what is that? regis philbin kind of thing? how long can it james comey, a basically a fired federal bureaucrat, how long can he read this thing out? >> it is just fascinating because i read the book. i was able to get it over the weekend, and i closed the book and thought to myself i had to read it because i need to know
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all of these story lines, but if i am going to get this book it, to be entertained, i would not look for this. it is up for trumpet fans, inside the trump world, fine. when you have michael wolff, whether it is fiction or non, for the people who don't like a charm, you have a market. for james comey, he is writing a book for the comey family. maybe it will go in his library. but nobody who likes hillary clinton will look at this and say now i feel better. in fact, i am shocked that stephen colbert, who is more pro-hillary clinton then the hillary clinton would give him this kind of reception. he got hit hard with another question from the "the view." he is like a caged lion waiting in the wings. and the thing is -- >> mark: it greg gutfeld made this point earlier today. his whole act has always been to be tortured. he has already become -- a
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disavowing of the book. maybe i should not have put in the bit about the president's hand. he is already doing to the book what he did to the hillary investigation. you know, he felt bad, so he reopened it, then he felt bad, so he closed it again. and now, he is doing the two segments of his own book. >> saying that politics does matter, but yet, i said okay, i am going to go have a press conference announcing that the disk in contains top-secret information. by the way, greg gutfeld, not a nice guy. please don't bring him up again. even though this is your segment and your show. >> he compared you to the guys in the stormy daniels picture appear they are beginning to emerge for me. it is like comey a daniels, the pornstar who only finds himself totally hot. they are a bizarre pairing.
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the hardest working man in show business. we look forward to that. >> i will be there friday. >> great, we will see you then. a leader of the women's march says that the boycott on starbucks must continue because the company is willing to work with a jewish group, and it gets even more bizarre. that is coming up next. plus, you know you wanted. it does it threaten the fabric of the american republic? that's all coming up next on "tucker." nothing says spring like fresh flowers, so let's promote our spring travel deal on choicehotels.com like this. earn one free night when you stay just twice this spring. allergies. or, badda book. badda boom. book now at choicehotels.com
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>> mark: starbucks has been a probably liberal corporation for years, but that hasn't bought them an ounce of mercy now that's the knives are out for them. the women's much later, tamika mallory, is a pal of louis farrakhan. planning to shut down a thousand stores for sensitivity training. it simply is not enough. in fact, it is counterproductive because they are enlisting the antidefamation league it. and she says that the jewish group is constantly attacking a black and brown people. so the boycott of starbucks must continue. robert is an attorney and, a political strategist for the rainbow push coalition. he joins us. robert, as far as i understand the accusations here, one group
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of racist, starbucks, have made the mistake of hiring another group of racist, the antidefamation league it, and ta third group of rhesuses, the supporters of the race as much. all of these groups are liberals. it looks like the rainbow coalition is a little bit more precious than that in practice. >> the log group. but on this point, i think what smith mallory is pointing out is the fact that the ceo of the antidefamation league, is a former starbucks executive. a lot of the people involved in this, eric holder, his record is so deplorable on issues of police brutality. that the black slave matter movement started while eric holder was the attorney general. it is a matter of not just doing
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p.r., and an issue that has to affect real change. >> mark: so you are saying that eric holder, who was a black attorney general under a black president, and the head honcho of the adl, the antidefamation league, who held some phony baloney diversity job, advising president obama, that these guys are to insensitive to do sensitivity training for starbucks. >> is not about sensitivity. it is about having policies that address issues of institutional bias and stereotypes. how about sabrina fulton, the mother of trip on martin, who was killed because they thought that he was stealing, just because he was wearing a hoodie. that is what bias does to individuals. you have to have a real event. if you want to wait a minute. when you were doing the rainbow push, they have done these kinds
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of training sessions for corporations, for years, you needed people who can train them. in this case, starbucks, which is a famously liberal corporation, to the point where they are putting liberal messages on their coffee cups, an incident arose because they had two people in their who were in the store but didn't want to buy coffee, didn't want to buy one of their cardboard pastries, didn't want to buy one of their butterscotch pepperoni mackey autos or whatever the hell else they are selling, the argument, because of who they are, the identity group that they belong to, they should have been allowed to remain in the store. >> no, the issue is that every other person knows that people are there who are not there at that exact moment. and the fact that we stereotype individuals, based on how they do not have the same rights as other people. that is across-the-board. that is not -- we cannot have
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situations where individuals are kicked out and targeted and then arrested because of their identity, versus being part of another ethnic group of peers that is a point that has to be pushed across. not some phony baloney idea that these people just didn't want to buy something. they were there, just like any other individual, and if they had bought something leader come about something then, those individuals were being pointed out. >> mark: wait a minute, starbucks is shutting down the very entire chain for the sensitivity training. the objective for the antidefamation league is that they are constantly opposed, as tamika mallory says, to black and brown people. is that actually true? >> law, the antidefamation league, the nation of islam -- >> mark: they are against louis farrakhan because he says things like instead of going on about this, the it should ask
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themselves what they did to make hitler mad enough to be about opposed to them. that is what he was saying. and that is why the antidefamation league is opposed to louis farrakhan. but here is my point. these are liberal groups. why are they insufficiently liberal? because the right-wing groups generally don't want to do sensitivity training. it is a liberal thing. it is liberal training. if liberal groups can't even agree on their own sensitivity training, maybe there is no rainbow. maybe we should all just go back to hating each other openly. >> it is not about liberal groups and not about sensitivity training. it is about the point of implicit bias that can have deadly effects for people who are simply arrested for no reason. think about what would happen if there were not people there with cameras. they arrested the demo. they were charged with resisting arrest, they can no longer apply for certain licenses.
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you ruin someone's life based upon an implicit bias that you hold. that is called of just having regular human decency. that is what needs to be put across. >> mark: we have to leave it there. we will be back after the break with part two of our series. is college worth it? tonight, he tackles the impact of affirmative action on americans. that is coming up next. that's a whole different ballgame. i was in shock. i am very proud of the development of drugs that can prevent the rejection and prevent the recurrence of the original disease. i never felt i was going to die. we know so much about transplantation. and we're living longer. you cannot help but be inspired by the opportunities that a transplant would offer. my donor's mom says "you were meant to carry his story". and butch.aura. and tank. and tiny.
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>> mark: we are back now with part two of the series is college worth it? because the key to success in this country, and a degree from a brand-name university is a virtual guarantee of wealth and power, and we believe that it is, then one of the most important questions we can ask about america is this. how exactly do you get into a prestigious university? what are the standards?
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well, remarkably, nobody really knows the answer. it is a bewildering mystery to most of us. it is a treasure map with the directions of spirit. and that is not an accident. colleges consistently refused to it admit how they admit students. secrecy is the key to their power, end. but there are some facts available, thanks to whistle-blowers and college admission offices. civil rights suit followed over the years. we do know something about admission standards. despite what you may have heard, higher education is not really -- they are not a lot of slow kids at harvard, but that does not mean that all of the hardest working applicants get in. other factors come into play. the first and probably least publicized is legacy admissions. you are more likely to get into a prestigious school if your parents went there, much more likely, it turns out.
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a2011 study of elite universities found that the children of undergraduate alumni were on average 45% more likely to get in. in earlier study found that it was equivalent to 160 points on the s.a.t. that is a major leg up. they understand that it helps with fund-raising. they don't like to talk about it, but it is true. the other fact that they don't like to talk about is affirmative action. in real life, that decision meant nothing. skin color remains an essential consideration at every level of the process. the average admissions office is every bit as race conscious in every -- the numbers tell the story. they show a huge discrepancy between achievement that colleges require of africans of different racial groups. this is true at the undergraduate level in the graduate level.
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new data from the association of american medical colleges found that african-american students with low scores and average grades had a 56% of getting into med school. at the other end, asian students with the exact same scores and grades had a 6% chance of getting in. so facts like this have spurred lawsuits from individuals alleging discrimination. proving that there has been discrimination. defenders of the current system say that nobody is being discriminated against and that race has nothing to do with these numbers. of course, no one actually believes that. consider this example. a rare race neutral admissions policy, the student body is 43% asian in 2013. at harvard, which has a quotas as it once did against, even as the number of asian applicants have risen. when skin color becomes a criterion for admission, some
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people lose. but who exactly wins? you know, no one ever asks that. we know who is supposed to benefit. affirmative action was designed to level the playing field for americans whose ancestors had been discriminated against. primarily, this meant a black applicants. yet, 50 years after affirmative action began, the percentage of african-americans attending colleges it looks to be dropping. how does that happen? simple. if foreigners are taking their place. under the rules of race conscious admission, the son of a nigerian tycoon meets the same standards as the son of a single mother from the south side of chicago. for diversity goals, they are exactly the same, but yet they are not the same at all. one is poor, american, and dissented from people brought to this country by force. you probably want to help those kids. the other is a rich foreigner. he doesn't need your help it.
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yet, who has a better chance of leveraging diversity standards to get into harvard? you know the answer, the rich kid does. he gets an advantage he hasn't turned and doesn't deserve. and that is a win for him. harvard wins also for being inclusive. meanwhile, this kid from the south side of chicago does not go to school. it is accelerating as immigration accelerates. the 2007 study found that among black students in the top to 28 american universities, it was double the representation in the bar population. at ivy league schools, students from immigrant families accounted for nearly 41% of black freshmen. at harvard, a study three years earlier found that two-thirds of all black undergrads were from immigrant backgrounds. this is the opposite of what affirmative action was designed to do. yet over time, the definition of who is eligible has gotten even
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further than where it began. illegal immigrants now qualify for lower admission standards. now identifying as hispanic rather than white, gives them 130 points on the s.a.t. so this is a huge advantage for newly arrived immigrants over americans. why should the dissented of spanish conquistadors have an advantage over the descendants of irish indentured workers? how is it fair? of course, it isn't fair. that is why it is never explained or defended. americans lose in this arrangement. african-americans get shafted completely in favor of foreigners with no connection to this country. yet few complain about it because almost no one understands what is happening. and that is why the admissions process is secret, so that you
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want challenged. chairman of the u.s. commission on civil rights, she spoke with us about all of this just a moment ago. thank you very much for coming on. >> thank you for having me. >> tucker: what is the purpose of affirmative action? because the goal is to make sure that our colleges and universities have a chance to achieve the diversity that they say that they want for their schools. for the long-standing precedent is that they can use affirmative action if there are no other means to achieve that diversity to be able to satisfy this. >> tucker: so it is not an attempt to address past wrongs, it is simply for the sake of variety. >> well, it started as an attempt to make up for past wrongs, budget schools have said that what they want to do is educate students to live in, working, be prepared for an increasingly global society and are to be able to be full participants in the world that they will enter. so achieving diversity is one way of making sure that students
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are able to be educated to that end. >> tucker: so this has been done, you reduce it to grades and test scores. it still remains true that the chinese, particularly, and koreans score 500 points higher than other groups with the same admissions rates. >> so here is the fly in your analysis. you are reducing it, the schools, the universities have a first amendment academic interest in selecting whom they want to educate and how they want to educate. and what they say -- >> tucker: i am just saying it is discrimination. any other group would be totally outraged. >> what the court has said is that that is not how we analyze it. that is not discrimination. you take a look at whether the schools analyzing -- >> tucker: i am aware of what the court says. i just don't think it makes a
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ton of sense. do you think -- part of the purpose of affirmative action, i think what most people would identify with, is the idea that there are groups in america, particularly african-americans, who have been discriminated against, and this is a way of making good on that. or trying. how does it make you feel when you see the numbers that foreign-born black students displace african-american students, especially a procedure schools at a really high rate? and then they are saying that they are diverse when they are letting into the kid of the nigerian ambassador. >> it -- i haven't seen those numbers, and that is not my experience from investigating this. in fact, what we are seeing now in particular is a hostility to having people come up to this country from other countries. we are seeing a drop off in international students. it is affecting the bottom line. >> tucker: the exact numbers, let's say you know, i don't know, 19% of all black people in
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the united states were foreign-born, but the percentage of black students at prestigious schools were foreign born were like 45%. that would suggest that they are disproportionately getting this. but you don't think that is a problem? >> again, you need to resist your reduction of the applicants to a particular characteristic. it >> tucker: the schools reduce them to that. they are risk conscious in the way that they do admissions. >> let me tell you that that is not true. the schools are pretty opaque in the way that they do their admissions. that is a problem for the american public, but i have exactly this topic. what i have seen time and time again is that the schools actually do a very good job of taking a look at to what the student say about themselves, what they are recommending. >> tucker: we are almost out of time. why can't we judge it for ourselves? this is the gateway to wealth and power. a degree from a procedure school. it is overwhelming. end of the tax rates are overwhelming. why don't i have a right you
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know what the criteria are that they are using? >> i am a huge believer in transparency. i think it would be better for the american public to have more information. we entered into this topic, and we evaluated this question, and now they are able to share what people's questions were. >> tucker: okay, well i am totally with you on that. thanks for joining us. >> thank you so much for having me. ms. gomez golf >> mark: that's part two. here's a college that isn't worth it. a professor in california says that she is happy barbara bush's data, and she is bragging that she can't be fired for saying i it. also, taking over america. could it be a threat to our national well-being. we will return. feel the clarity of
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he won a professor in california says barbara bush was an amazing racist, and she is boasting thae can't be fired for it. trace gallagher has more. >> palestinian american, who for years has been accused of making racist statements against white women. one hour after barbara bush died, he tweeted that she was an amazing racist that raised a war criminal. out of here with your nice words. adding either you are against these pieces of [bleep] or you are part of the problem. that is actually how simple this is. i am happy the witch is dead. then after the professor was attacked on social media, she wrote all of the hate i am getting has almost reminded me
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how happy i am that george w. bush is probably really sad right now. and she can't be fired because of tenure, the college apologized to the bush family. they said -- >> mark: thanks for that. an interesting angle on the passing of mrs. bush. goat yoga, exactly what it sounds like. lotus poses and it domesticated goats. but is it good for america or america as it goes? look at this. just canceled because they didn't have the right health. she is a spokesperson for peta new york. i know peta is always concerned when the animals are involved, but do goats seem to enjoy this? at least the baby goat stew.
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speak out there is nothing wrong with doing the downward dog pose next to a goat. obviously, it looks like an event that is intended to just be harmless fun, but like anything involving animals and the wrong hands, it can turn into an abusive situation. recently, in australia, a petting zoo that was renting goats for goat yoga, the owner was left with ten counts of cruelty to animals because the goats were found to be malnourished, dehydrated. >> mark: isn't that necessary if you just want to baby goats? you don't want them walking around. >> well, that is a great question. you know, the best thing people can do if they want to participate in an activity like goat yoga is do it at a place like a sanctuary, where you know that they are being treated well. and they have a good life. it is committed to ensuring
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their well-being. there are babies there. they did not get there because they were purchased someplace of sketchy. it is a good situation for the animals, and you can go have fun. >> mark: thanks for that. i like a goats. the saudi arabian most beautiful ghost competition. even more beautiful when they are out walking around with you. thank you for that. we will close it out in just a moment. goat yoga. we deal with all of the important issues. im last year so allstate is giving us money back on our bill. well, that seems fair. we didn't use it. wish we got money back on gym memberships. get money back hilarious. with claim-free rewards. switching to allstate is worth it. at a comfort inn with a glow taround them, so people watching will be like, "wow, maybe i'll glow too if i book direct at choicehotels.com." who glows? just say, badda book. badda boom.
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goat town? i am having my goat and getting my hat, and sean hannity is standing by with an entirely -- we guarantee it, a goat free show. he is next. take it away. >> sean: i am not sure about that last mystery, but we can get back to that later appeared later. >> mark: i am coming into your studio with a goat. you will love the little fella. >> sean: can't wait to meet him. hey, welcome to "hannity." we have massive breaking news stories. wait until you hear my opening monologue in just a minute. but first, president trump is saying tonight that he will in fact meet with north korean dictator in the coming weeks, kim jong-un, to actually discuss the denuclearization of that rogue nation. we are in washington tonight with what could be historic details. >> getting back to all of the critics who charged him with the
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