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tv   Tucker Carlson Tonight  FOX News  June 26, 2018 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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hand. >> i noticed that, i can't fault her, she's a patriots fan. i tried to handle it gracefully. but i love our fan base and i love everything about them. their tenacity on what they do. they've always been so supportive. >> go fly. ♪ >> tucker: good evening and welcome to "tucker carlson tonight." every american is born with inherent rights, that's what our founding documents say. and the purpose of the american government is to protect those rights which has been our national create for hundreds of years, and it's worked. for the left no longer believes that. the left has decided the bill of rights only applies to people who agree with them and their views are protected by the first amendment. your views are hate speech. the second amendment covers their security detail. you can't be trusted to have a gun at home. now the activist laughs tell us that people who disagree with them no longer have movement for
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association. they can no longer go to movies or restaurants and if they dare leave their homes they will be surrounded by mobs and a friend. last friday, sarah huckabee sanders were forced to leave a restaurant because the owner didn't like the politics. sanders and her husband went home but the rest of the family went to another restaurant. but that wasn't good enough, they had committed the sin of being related to someone who works at the white house so they continue to harangue them as they continue to eat. protesters have amassed outside of the home of white house aide to stephen miller. in case their intentions weren't clear enough, they put up mark wanted posters with miller's face on them. a dhs employee meanwhile found a burn to come up decapitated al carcass on his front porch. the message is clear, activists on the left are moving toward violence. they are aware of this and some applauded. a piece yesterday in "splinter news" which is the owned by
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univision, that's both just the minimum baseline here." how extreme? the article fondly recalls the domestic terror bombings of the 1970s. thousands per year in america, that's our future, the aicle says. unfortunately, we are headed there fast. congsswoman maxine waters purged of the to hunt down and find members of the president's cabinet. here's part of it. >> if you -- you haven't seen anything yet. you have members of your cabinet that are being booed out of restaurants. protesters are taking about their house. they are getting no peace, n sleep. no peace, no sleep. let's make sure we show up wherever we have to show up and
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if you see anybody from that cabinet in a restaurant, in a department store, at a gasoline station, you get out and you form a crowd and you push back on them. you tell them they are not welcome anymore, anywhere. >> tucker: maxine waters isn't just any member of congress, "the daily beast" calls her "a folk hero." "buzzfeed" calls for the new unfazed challenge of the democratic party. she is also a civil rights leader which makes it a little weird that she's demanding certain people be denied public accommodations. that's exactly what she's saying and she said it again yesterday. >> i stand by my speech, and saying that the prosts have already started. they will probably continue. >> the message of all this is clear, the left no longer
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considers the political opponents fellow citizens or eat even human. how long until they start openly calling for something bad to happen to those appointments? in the case of maxine waters, it won't be the first time. in 1992, waters cheered as a racist mobs burned in los angeles. she put at the time, riot is the voice of the unheard of. when reginald denny was dragged from his truck and nearly murdered for the color of his skin, beaten with a cinder block in the head on camera, waters partied with them after his trial. she has a record of endorsing mob violence, everyone in washington knows that and democrats don't care. chuck schumer did called waters in his most recent remarks "not american," good for him. hardly anyone else said anything. nancy pelosi blamed dona trump. that was the theme. >> i feel that this is similar to nazi germany.
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the totit behavior is shocking and horrendous. we have to be vigilant. >> they follow the exact pattern that has or has, he is evil. and at the thing is, i thought i will come in and he wouldn't really know because he has to do his showmanship thing, but he's evil. >> this is pur and simple race, racism, that's all this is. people who support him are frightened to death of this country becoming the browning of america. >> tucker: something interesting is happening. as progressives become more authoritarian and less, tolerant, they seem more convinced that they are fighting actual rather than their fellow americans. the more they accused the administration of extremism, the more extreme they become. and that's not surprising. once you decide that the people who disagree with you are nazis, everything is allowed.
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why wouldn't you threaten them in restaurants or burn their houses down, or who knows. this could very well end in tragedy, some progressive seemed to welcome all that. quentin james as part of a politil committee that supports democrats. it is says they are accomplices. this is the language of total war. it's scary, no place in politics. the only place that can stop it are the adults on the left. there are still some democratic members of congress, and media chieftains like jeff zucker at cnn or anti-lac at cnbc. they are cowering and complicit in all of this but the country badly needs them to cool the rhetoric and reign in the mob. no more talk on their tv channels. no more screaming at people in restaurants. there is a point of no return, and we are approaching it. we need their help to pull back.
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peter, thank you for coming on. given everything you have seen, what would happen if the people who are encouraging mob intimidation and extremism, and they are encouraging it openly, what would happen if they took the reins of that actual power in this country? >> there have been maybe 2 inches instances in the united states for this kind of activity has been replicated. i think that one of them might be the reconstruction area, where you have a resistance, resisting the results of the civil war. you have public officials of florida private citizens to deprive other citizens to the rights to public accommodations, and that is secured to all citizens and were secured by the civil war. that has only happened once before in our history where public officials are actually exhorting private citizens and in that case it was the klan who
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was a military ring at the time, essentially, of the southern democrats, to deprive blacks of their rights under the law and also deprive them of public accommodations. you might say that jim crow area, but you might have a singular governor of the southern states who might stand in a schoolhouse store. but that did occur. now we have this, and it's extraordinary because i think we are at this inflection point for a host of reasons. that gives us a republican system of government to shield us against mob violence and of the passions of the day. that is an informed electorate, informed citizenry, and responsible and elected officials. as to the former, we have now and extremely biased media that
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doesn't really inform, but proselytizers and harangues and acts as an organ for one particular side to get their viewpoint out. and our educational system hasn't been a technomic teaching effective history for 30 years now. as we look back to the last 50 years or so, it's difficult to imagine, a lincoln, a roosevelt, eisenhower or reagan, doing the kind of inflaming of the electric the way we see some elected officials doing. not even trying to tamp down the passions from the rhetoric that the founders understood were anathema to effectively founder of the public. >> this is an inflection point and you are exactly right. you put it in perspective.
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thank you very much. >> robert akil is a attorney and activists. thanks for coming on. if progressive activists have a right to intimidate and scream at people they disagree with politically and public restaurants and in front of their homes, what are the boundaries of that? and what are the boundaries now in the new activists of the left? >> we are talking about the first amendment rights. what maxine waters said to her supporters is, exercising her freedom of speech. it's a swamp territory in d.c. right now, where they only listen to lobbyists and special interest groups. by all means, don't commit
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violence, don't do anything. >> it's a little stunning for me to take out a lecture from anyone on the left who has been working overtime the past couple of years. and it's a debate about whether it is appropriate to scream at people in public, and to force them out of, for example, restaurants. this is not an attempt to win them over or so than the other side of the issue, it's an effort to intimidate them. you can't read it any other way. you can't tell me they were trying to inform sarah huckabee sanders. they were punishing her. >> because members of the administration don't talk to the american people, they don't have regular press briefings, they don't go out and have town hall meetings, this is the only time the individuals have the opportunity to speak with them. it's been >> tucker: wait, trump just preempted our show yesterday -- >> they don't speak
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in a town hall. >> tucker: we hear a lot from administration, a lot from the opponents. i'm glad that you are here, we disagree. i think we should have a conversation. he did not have the right to scream at me in front of my children at a restaurant. it's around my house on a weekend. come to soccer games, go to my parents funerals. do you see the difference between having a debate over the issues and intimidating people in the public space? >> this is part of the administration. right now it's explaining what the policies are went by explaining what's happening to these children. if they want to have a conversation about this, i do like other administrations have done and do town halls around the country. let the people express their feelings to the administration. understand what public opinion is. don't simply hide behind the walls of power. if they are going to give soccer
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games and going to your home, they are saying they can't cano you in public. >> tucker: it's the worst category of almost nonhuman beings beings. you are by definition encouraging -- first of all your closing out any possibility of agreement or compromise, and you are basically saying, hurt them. if you thought that nazis work taking over the country, i would consider force. because by definition it encourages violence. >> lets understand that during the obama administration he was accused of being everything from a muslim sleeper cell to a non-american citizen. joe wilds yelled out, you lied to come up during the presidential address. somebody has to fix the issue.
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right now we have an administration that refuses to the american people and it's difficult to get in there. >> it's not my job to flack for the white house. but holy smokes. they speak a lot and that's not really the issue. the issue is, you have a right to take political differences and turn them into some kind of mob retaliation. maybe the left should stop calling people nazis. maybe that's too far. maybe that's setting the table for something awful. can we agree on that? >> look tucker, we can agree on that but also, can the right not support charlottesville who has nazi walking around with swastikas? >> we are having many side conversations. >> it's one thing to say, of
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someone who ousing, guess, nazi views, you are a nazi. but what you are saying is, what i need to do is destroy you. and that's with the left is saying, isn't it? >> i think what happens is, when you do not condemn, we do not condemn people like david duke. we get it she's confused with them. there's a difference between doing an hour-long speech to people in heaven at town hall where you speak with peoe and getting their side of the conversation. >> all right. thank you. fox senior political analyst brit hume joins us tonight. i don't want to be historical or read too much into this but it does seem like we moved, and you have more perspective than my, to a place where there is no possibility of compromise where one size sees the other and it must be destroyed. >> i completely agree with that.
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when maters next prize on the floor, she will be recognized as the gentle lady from california. there may not be that many people that think right now that she's gentle or a lady, but that's the custom of the house. members address each other as ladies and gentlemen. in the senate, members are ever discouraged from direct addressing directly to each other on the senate floor. they will often refer to others such as, i disagree from the distinguished senator from wherever. there is a reason for this. political debates can become heated, and they can devolve into the brutal and bitter name-calling that we have seen lately, when the most extraordinarily harsh things were said about one another and that can enter and lead to violence. in 1856, as senator from massachusetts named karl sumner
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was caned it nearly to death on the senate floor by a southern member from south carolina who disagreed with him on the issue that divided us so deeply and that of course was slavery. we are seeing and hearing some of the harsh rhetoric today that we heard in that era, and it's dangerous. it's as dangerous as steve's police can tell you. charles sumner can tell you that as well. that's why these two institutions recognize that this kind of talk and behavior has consequences which can be quite severe. >> tucker: wouldn't it be helpful if the adults on the left showed up and said that? you don't have to like trump, but you can't call people nazi as anymore. no one is saying anything like that. >> the let me tell you something. the president definitely deserves his share of the
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responsibility because he's tossed about his share of thing things. he says the strongest things. buthere is a cycle here. the president will say or tweet something that is characteristically not terribly precise and very often exaggerated. the critics will respond to it by taking the worst possible, most extreme interpretation of what he has said and they will react to it accordingly. then the spiral begins. pretty soon, you are hearing him accuse them -- the president mused about how we shouldn't have to go through a laborious and time-consuming legal process to keep illegal border crossers from gettingnto this country. and it was immediately accused of being authoritarian, and of trying to illuminate people's due process. the fact of the matter is, what he described it is precisely the way that many countries deal with illegal border crossers, and the way some of them are
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dealt with by this country now. but that was lost on countless critics. "the washington post" in a front-page news story described that as an attack on the judicial system. this is where we go with us. once you start this stuff, this exaggerated reaction, it spirals and it can spiral out of control which is what i think you were worried about and what i know i'm certainly worried about. we need america as we argued with each other, to keep a civil tongue. >> thank you, great to see you. >> the supreme court today handed a white house a victory upholding its travel ban. details on that, next. ito take care of anyct messy situations..
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>> tucker: at one of the very first acts of the current administration has been vindicated after nearly a year and a half. today the supreme court upheld the constitutionality of the president's travel ban. the lt reacted and it's typically restrained way and then the republic tweeted, if it wasn't clear, it should be now. democrats should prepare to pack the supreme court. david differ he is a lawyer and he joins us now. thanks for coming on. you had a band that didn't mention muslims and did not restrict immigration from the biggest muslim countries but did restrict it from non-muslim countries like north korea. can we just say now that was probably the dumbest talking point ever, and it was a lie. >> you know tucker i was on your show exactly one year ago today to argue about this with you. one year ago the supreme court
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issued its decision that overturned the halt on the ban. now the supreme court has made its final ruling on the third band. that third band is different from the second man and much different from the first band. but in the end, there are many who still believe that the purpose of the ban was to ban muslims from coming to the country. and there is some support for that. so what i think is, this is still really bad policy for the country. there are some good legal arguments now that supreme court took hold of and a very thin majority, 5-four, used to rule in favor of the ban and support the band. this is still bad policy because we are -- >> tucker: okay. >> lots of muslims who were not a security threat and we found some muslims who have actually engaged in terrorist acts here
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in the united states. >> tucker: it so how would we know, for example, if in an immigrant is from afghanistan, somalia, syria? do we trust those governments to keep close track of the records that are -- of the people coming here? that's a rhetorical question, the answer is obviously not. so why would we take any risk if we ever can't know or will know who they are? >> obviously the administration thinks it knows and that's why it's taken the time to ban people from certain countries. >> but don't we know, to a degree that if you are coming here from somalia, it doesn't have a government functional enough to keep track of who you are, and to pass on any applicable or relevant records about you? that's a different dysfunctional place. same i would argue syria under conditions of civil war right now. so who would disagree with that? do we trust the governor of somalia to tell us the truth? >> at the trump administration disagrees with you about
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somalia. >> tucker: while they may, but they are not here. do you trust the government of somalia to the vet for us, the people of somalia who come here? is obviously crazy. >> what we have to trust somebody, right? so when dhs, the state department -- when they did a review they concluded actually, this administration concluded that somalia did have some procedures in place that warranted it not to be in the band. then it was put back in the ban band. >> tucker: why would i trust some bureaucrat at the state department with my country, and my children? like, how would we know? the state department, the administration says, don't worry about it. we trust the goverent of somalia. why shouldn't i laugh at them when they say something so self-evidently stupid and dishonest to me? >> a couple of reasons.
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first of all americans deserve to be secure. but with respect to somalia, any immigrant who seeks to pay the to come here, they go through a review process. those review processes generally work. and our people here who apply for a visa, they don't trust the simile in government. they look at the documents, they do venting. they do an interview. >> how many people -- this is so stupid. we don't have anybody on the ground in somalia. how many state department employees are vetting the many hundreds of thousands of somali refugees who have come to this country? how many are there in somalia? honestly, do we have thousands of them? >> we have to travel to djibouti, they have to go to the u.s. embassy, and do the process there. >> but we can't bet any of it
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because somalia is not functioning country. it's not fine. and we know that now, because we have -- actually they don't show that at all. >> >> no american has been killd by a simile that came to the united states. >> and how much money to somali terror groups al-shabaab has flown from minneapolis the last three years? we are out of time, unfortunately, but if you would tell me how we are vetting these people, i would be assured to know. stronach hillary clinton's excuses to her continues to circle the globe. we will tell you the light latest triumph of blame shifting and excuse monitoring, next. insurance that won't replace
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your doctor should monitor your weight and may stop treatment. other side effects include upper respiratory tract infection and headache. tell your doctor about all the medicines you take and if you're pregnant or planning to be. ♪ otezla. show more of you. >> tucker: it's not exactly the rolling stones on tour, but hillary clinton's endless excuses world tour is doing brisk business still. clinton was recently in the united kingdom where she began complaining about the american electoral system. here is a selection. >> in the u.s., it was a perfect storm. deep currents of anger and resentment flowing through our culture. a political test that told the world my emails for the most important story. and on information warfare
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campaign waged from the kremlin. >> tucker: waged from the kremlin. the darkest resources of the kremlin no doubt. but the 2016 election is still atop the conversation. the president brought it up himself last night. >> she writes a book and she does the tour. how many reasons that she give for using losing the election? every week it was a different reason. she blamed everyone for losing the election, except yourself. >> tucker: tammy bruce is a radio show host in new york and obviously a frequent and treasured guest on this show. i don't want to carry water for the kremlin, but i can't resist asking. what do you think this is about? i've asked you many times, but i'm still baffled. >> it matches what we were discussing earlier in the show about the left-wing reaction to
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the election. based in emotion, no facts, it has nothing to do with policy and everything to do with some up session if you will, and rage. she is on foreign soil, in addition, and yet now, she's not only confronting trump about policy, or about having better ideas, and this is a problem in that speech. she also compared him to turkey's tyrannical leader who just got reelected. but she still, personally for some reason, can't resolve the fact that she failed. that this was not going to happen. and when she talks about a russian conspiracy, it really was about the simple basic decisions in the campaign like not going to wisconsin. very basic campaign decision-making that contributed to that failure. >> tucker: is a you think this
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is an example of a public figure living out her emotional life in public? >> tammy: yes. as a woman, and i want women in wer, we are terrific leaders. the fact that this has become an almost stereotypical cartoon of what happens with a woman, misogynists argue that women are not rational. we don't look and deal with the issues properly and we can't be reasoned with. this is not helpful. it is a shame and, at the same time, you are arguing -- and when she argues against the electoral college as an example, she is arguing that the entire republican structure of the united states is at fault as well. it's a founders now who are the problem, for now to be blamed. i think that she is a representation also of what is happening here at home with the left and what's going on now with all of the harassment and violence. >> not helpful. that's exactly right. i think candidly a lot of people
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who support her probably feel that way as well. president trump's new executive order has not halted the crisis on the border. one u.s. senator says, american officials are ignoring those directives and actively encouraging illegal immigration into our countries. that senator joins us next. (ha) (sighs and chuckles) sorry, are you gonna... (harmonica interrupts) everytime. geico. 15 minutes could save you 15% or more on car insurance. with savings on the new sleep number 360 smart bed.
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dissolve, lift and rinse away food the first time. new cascade platinum. the new united explorer card makes things easy. traveling lighter. taking a shortcut. (woooo) taking a breather. rewarded! learn more at theexplorercard.com >> tucker: the new executive moorehead of the white house is intended to and family separations while still supporting tolerance toward illegal immigration, but it may not be working or even close to working. yesterday the head of the border patrol said his agency and stop referring adults for criminal prosecution if they cross the border with minors. meanwhile, thousands of families and unaccompanied minors continue to run arrive at the border. senator ron johnson of wisconsin chairs the homeland committee.
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thank you for coming on. and a president can issue an executive order. the question is, can you make the agencies and bureaucrats carry it out? i think the question many of us have our, are the many bureaucrats working for this administration in sync with policy priorities and are they actually trying to curb illegal immigration in this country? do you think? >> if they are forced to follow laws in this country. we have laws that prohibit us from prosecuting the people coming to this country illegally, and keeping family units together. we don't have capacity in terms of beds, so we do have to follow the laws. it's the laws, the legal presence and loopholes i created this mess. that's what congress needs to fix. >> so it sounds like the laws are 100% weighted on the side of foreign citizens breaking the law against the interest of american citizens who run the government and pay for it and on
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whose behalf it exists, is that correct? >> pretty much, right. we have the feinstein amendment, the human trafficking law. they are the ones that said cbp can only hold a child for 72 hours and then we have to turn that child over to hhs. then hhs has no problem deporting those children. since 2012, i was kind of sparked by daca. those children, 99% of those are still in the country. and then the way be handle family units under president obama because again, you can't keep the children with adults if you are going to prosecute them and put them in an adult detention facilities. as a result, the obama administration kept families together which was called catch and release. if we do not detain people coming to this country illegally, they don't show up for hearings and it's impossible
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to deport them. many common family units and they've been coming from central americaince 2012. 900,000. we have 3300 beds in certified detention facilitie and we have 900,000 coming in here since 2012 so we simply don't have the capacity. >> tucker: i'm not a progressive so i don't assume that everyone i disagree with his evil. i think there have to be some democrats who see this for what it is, a crisis that hurts the country. are you familiar with any legislation sponsored by democrats on the hill and backed by democrats on the hill? >> i am not because by and large they want open borders. but we know it works. michael trued off, when he was secretary of homeland security, faced a similar crisis in 2005 when we had an influx of brazilians coming in. he instituted a policy of
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apprehending, processing and returning them to brazil very quickly, called texas hold 'em. within a year, that was down below one year. we found out through that process that rapid deportation and returning those individuals that don't have valid asylum claims actually discourages further illegal immigration. we have done the exact opposite during the obama administration. then when president trump tries to enforce the law, he finds out that they are just legal precedent as well as the active capacity to just do it. >> when you enforce the law, people are more likely to obey the law. senator, thank you. i appreciate it. meanwhile in great britain, a man named tommy robinson is still languishing in prison. this crime was an attempt at covering a rate trial. but no one wanted to hear it.e. that's coming up next.
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>> tucker: welcome back. we have a fox news alert, there's something going on and we don't want to overstate this because we have virtually no details. something is happening on the tarmac of the jfk tarmac in new york. there's a jetblue flight parked there and there's a ladder and people appear to be going up. there is a report that no one in the cockpit is communicating with the tower, and we can't confirm that or anything about this other than the pictures you are seeing. jetblue flight on the tarmac at jfk, entirely possible that there is a nonsinister explanation for all of this, we don't know. but that is happening and we wanted to tell you about that.
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we will bring you more information if anwhen we get it in this hour. for centuries, great britain was the forefront of human freedom. that country gave us the freedom of speech and of the press. it led efforts to abolish the splayed stomach and slave trade and the country created the common law and due process rights that we take for granted today. but freedom in great britain is on the decline. meanwhile a judge is calling for the mass blunting of kitchen knives in the u.k. in response to a wave of knife attacks, as if that's the cause or the solution. it is a mess. and anne-marie waters is going o talk about that. those in the u.k. are looking on
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in stunned surprise us about what is happening to tommy robinson and, more than that, the lack of response from what is being done to him in retaliation for speaking what he thinks is true. has he there been any complaints about what's going on? >> absolutely not. tommy robinson is persona non grata as far as the mainstream media is concerned. as far as various human rights groups, they ignore any persecution of people that they don't politically agree with. tommy robinson is one of many people who faces and has faced and continues to face persecution of some kind. if you say anything negative, even if you don't go along with a positive, the endless praise of islam in this country, you will find some form of persecution, whether it's by the state or in terms of arresting people for islamophobic comments
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or from the media, regardless of what your political views may be. then persona non grata, so the mainstream media is not expected to speak up for him. he speaks negatively about islam that is a persecution, and as you say our freedoms are rapidly being declined in terms of political freedoms in britain. it's very worrying and very serious and the media is not talking about it at all which even makes it more serious. >> you don't have to take a position on islam itself, but that is a sad story, but i'm glad to hear it from you. thank you very much. >> thank you. the one speaking of speech, if you thought that classic children's books were safe from the left attacks on speech, the written word and the passed
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itself, of course not. laura ingle's wilder is the latest great american writer going to the cultural scaffold. that story next. (indistinguishable muttering) that was awful. why are you so good at this? had a coach in high school. really helped me up my game. i had a coach. math. ooh. so, why don't traders have coaches? who says they don't? coach mcadoo! you know, at td ameritrade, we offer free access to coaches and a full education curriculum- just to help you improve your skills.
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for a limited time, save up to $500 plus free home delivery on sleep number 360 smart beds. ends june 30th. >> tucker: it looks like they are going to bulldoze the little house on the prairie, classic children's books by laura ingalls wilder are the latest works to run afoul of the left-wing cultural revolution now in progress. the association for library service to children just renamed it laura ingle wilder's award to the children's literature legacy award. the reason is, and you knew this, the "little house on the prairie" books somehow promote racism, sexism and many other. and she is the author of lessons from the prairie and she played cassandra ingalls on "little house on the prairie" on television, so she is well situated to respond. what do you make of this charge,
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i don't even understand it. >> so when i was writing "lessons from the prairie" i read all of the books and it's astonishing how equal all the women are in these books. to their own physical detriment they are risking life and limb on the prairie just alongside the men. women are described as working outside the home and selling things. this was written by a woman and they say the book represents outdated cultural ideas. i was looking at some of the other winners on their lis growing up in slavery. stories of young slaves being told by themselves. i bet there are some outdated notions about women as well which is why we read these historical accounts, to educate ourselves and understand our culture, where we came from, mistakes we've made in the past, and the strength our founding. you read both of these works, and this is a strong female author. it's a lead female character, even the show. and holly went they had a lead
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female character. the "me too" movement is, women are getting a fair shake. this is like an old woman project basically, if you look at laura ingalls wilder writing about her family come about her mother's life on the frontier. there are scenes where mott is building a house with paul. they dropped the log on her leg and she continues to build a house with the two of them with a broken foot. now that's equal rights. my conclusion is, these people just didn't read the books. >> tucker: the revolution isn't even sinister, it's dumb. but she made some smart insightful points. >> thank you. >> tucker: that's about it for us. tune into the show that is the sworn enemy of lying, pomposity, smugness and groupthink.
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dvr it you figure out how that works. in more than anything, stay tuned it to fox, sean hannity is standing by in new york to take you into the next hour. >> sean: tonight another huge win for the trump administration. the travel ban has been upheld by by t.s. supreme court and democrats predictably are lashing out. this coming as many on the left have literally started to completely and utterly unravel and be unhinged, unwilling to believe their own lying eyes. the top agenda is actually succeeding, mueller's is crumbling and the so-called blue wave is getting more and more remote in each passing day. in moments we will highlight the unhinged rhetoric coming from congresswoman maxine waters, plus another hannity history lesson revealing the blatant double standard surrounding the

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