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tv   The Five  FOX News  June 24, 2019 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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these three questions of. bond futures and interest rates. see what happens. i want to thank you very, very much. they have the same reaction that my staff did. he could be interesting. all right. we'll see you tomorrow. here comes "the five." ♪ >> juan: hello, everyone. i am juan williams with lisa boothe, jesse watters, dana perino, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five" ." the campaign of maximum pressure is on, as president trump slaps a fresh round of sanctions on iran targeting top officials, including their supreme leader and foreign minister. both nations previously teetering on the brink of war over the downing out of american drone last week.
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>> i'm not looking for war. and if there is, it will be obliteration like you've never seen before but i'm not looking to do that but you can't have a nuclear weapon. you want to talk good. otherwise you're going to have a bad economy. this no preconditions. here it is, look. you can have nuclear weapons. otherwise you can live in a shattered economy for a long time to come. >> juan: trump answered some critics who say he's being pushed into military actions by some of his more hawkish advisors. >> do you feel like you were being pushed into military action against iran? >> i have dogs and i have hawks. i have some hawks. john bolton is a hawk. he would take on the whole world at one time. that doesn't matter because i want both sides. >> juan: national security advisor, the aforementioned john bolton, defending his boss' canceled iran strike. >> neither iran nor any other
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hostile act or mistake u.s. prudence and discretion for weakness. no one has granted them a hunting license in the middle east. >> juan: dana perino, where do come out on the idea -- seems like there's a big conversation among people who are trump supporters about whether or not he should have gone forward or whether or not he exercise some discretion by saying i'm not going forward with the strike. >> dana: i am less interested in that as i am the actual decision as was happening in iran and the policy. let me say this. iran is trying to get leverage. they are trying to ratchet things up. the squeeze on the sanctions has put pressure on the regime and they are trying to get some attention. they are actually walking right up to the line. what is the threshold for u.s. pain inaction. they walked right up to the lin line. it wasn't the 130 $130 million
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drone. had there been people on that drone? i understand the plans of the president was going to possibly execute was drawn up way back when the maximum pressure campaign was first organized because they knew iran would try to retaliate in some way. there's not a lot of other ways iran can ratchet it up further without crossing the line, is what i'm hearing the president say. giving him another chance. i'm quite shocked that the whole process story leaked, unless they wanted it to leak. why would you do that to the president, unless they wanted it out there? i guess that's possible. i think it wasn't so much strategic and the response but possibly the right response because the result is the iranians are thrown off. they don't exactly know what's going on. now they have this opportunity. they could come back to the table. i don't necessarily think they will. >> juan: you don't think they are likely to respond to the
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president's offer? >> dana: to speak, no. these these additional sanctiont put some pressure on but they have a high threshold for pain as well. >> juan: jesse, the u.s. is trying to increase pressure by putting a most personal sanctions on khamenei and the foreign minister. we don't have a lot of options because the deal had the sanctions in it and we pulled out of the deal and said we are putting on sanctions, so we already had sanctions. >> jesse: the line about everything was kosher only have this deal in place is a lie. the iranians started launching ballistic missile tests against u.n. security council resolutions. they started sending shipments to north korea. they started sending millions of dollars to hezbollah and they started putting the iranian revolutionary guard outpost in iraq and syria.
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to say everything was contained in going down a great road and it is donald trump who ended up making the iranians act badly, that's just not true. the iranians have always hated us. they always will. they will always act like bad guys. as maxine waters said, donald trump is not the one provoking iran. maxine waters said an american drone, her drone, was an iranian airspace and we are provoking them to react. that's ridiculous that the left is trying to blame america for the evil that the iranians are doing. let's remember the iran deal, not ratified by congress. sold to the american public with lies. we bribe them with pallets of cash in the middle of the night. it's not a great deal to say we are fine. i think what's going on, i agree with dana, they are trying to sail far they can get. they are trying to split the europeans from the americans.
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i don't know if it's working. i think it has the opposite effect. >> lisa: that is the potential. there might be opportunity for president trump, especially after showing some restraint in not going through with the military strike because the more belligerent that iran acts and the more hostile activity they take part in, like the blowing up of the tankers or the increased uranium enrichment targeting or drones, doing things like that, the more they might push the neutral allies into our corner. i think the maximum pressure campaign is working enforcing our on on hand, forcing them to act hostile. we see the trump administration say we want to sit down. we want to talk. mike pompeo says he's going to go to the middle east talk to allies there, looking to our asian and european partners and build a global coalition. i think in hindsight, president trump showing that restraint strengthens our position in trying to get our allies to come help us and how being iran to the negotiating
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table. >> juan: going back to dana's point, do you think this makes it more likely we will have talks with iran? >> greg: you know, i hate getting invested in this story. unlike most americans. for code decades of the same crap, it is like being in a relationship that goes nowhere. i see two possibilities. the threat by iran to down a drone. it's expensive. it costs us money but it's once removed from killing people. i said this on thursday. i think it was thursday. it is stuff versus stuff. in the modern world, we should be really happy that we are not hurling bodies at each other. this has become a thing about a drone and they were going to hit another drone, it's going to upset us but it's not taking down a plane of people. if the media saw that his being pro-war, how stupid is that? to assume the fact that
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technology might reduce bloodshed is seen as pro-war? that's idiotic. to that point, you asked about who is pushing trump into military action. it's not the hawks. it's the media who mock him for his indecisiveness. they are goading him into doing something. the second point gives me hope. it feels like the north korea scenario which produced hostilities, if you remember. you may not agree with it but the fact is we are in a better situation than we were before. it's because trump offered to pass. the first passes you can go this way and it will be bad for you which is the quote obliteration. or you go this way and it's going to be great for you. you're going to have a great economy. he says i'll meet with you, no preconditions. he doesn't see meeting as a zero-sum gain. if you meet with me, he will meet with anybody, he's a salesman. will there be a meeting? i think so. it will be long-term. it's been 40 years. what's another five years?
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>> juan: wow. there's a sense of urgency to this moment. >> greg: no, there isn't. the media doesn't know how to cover it. >> dana: the stuff that hasn't linked, the stuff you can't see, the cyber war for. we can do a lot better than we used to be able to. iran is not the most transparent society where you can look in and see how it's crippled any of their financial institutions rather military. >> greg: i am amazed that the media mocks trump for sparing lives. he acknowledged the disproportionate nature of killing humans when a drone goes down. that's something we actually talked about on the show, and that's actually an antiwar position. if you define warrants killing people. >> lisa: whatever position trump holds, the media and its critics hold the opposite. he could literally say i want to give all illegal immigrants amnesty and democrats would support the wall. >> juan: dana's point about the process and reporting is key because part of the process was
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does the president know about the human cost of this action? he said it came to misinformation in the last moment, then the process reporting seems to indicate -- >> greg: i don't think there's a difference between learning 1. i don't think you're getting the whole information on that. that's part of the reporting. reporters are out of shape. they have had such a hard time reporting on real news. they are like a boxer that hasn't been in the ring for four years. they are having a problem with the story. >> juan: president trump is added again, trolling those in the mediums that he won't leave the white house if he loses. greg brexit down next on "the five" " this is not a bed. it's a revolution in sleep. the sleep number 360 smart bed is on sale now during our lowest prices of the season. it senses your movement, and automatically adjusts to keep you both comfortable. it even helps with this. so you wake up ready to hit the ground running.
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♪ >> greg: here's a theory: in most contests, the team having more fun wins and the team that loses its sense of humor loses, period. friday, president trump posted a meme predicting he would be president forever and ever. ♪ >> greg: yeah, that's real. normal people, i.e. people not in the media, saw this as lighthearted trolling mocking
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the triggered trump critics, like this fella here. >> if he loses, trump, he won't go. i've been saying that since before he got elected. >> greg: and he was a comedian wants. it is so obvious it hurts but still the media reports trump's jokes was dire warnings, a headline screams "trump posts insein twitter video threatening to be president for eternity." threatening. what moron writes this? i am awaiting their expose on why the chicken really crossed the road or does time fly if you throw a clock through the air? i bet that gets three pinocchios. how do these people get so, to use the medical term, stupid? the media, once operating under the guise of journalism, are now hall monitors. their jobs reduced to screaming liquid someone's head on tv! it's a joke, but not us. their workplace attire is sweatpants an open bathroom.
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that is today's media reporting on you as you make them the butt of the joke. >> you have joked about a third term. >> i only joke. i joke and i say... >> you will accept the results. whatever happens in 2020. you lose, you will be like, you're not going to like it but you walk out. recently i said watch. we'll drive the media crazy. let's go for -- some of the media said he's going to do it! >> greg: the trolls reporting on how they got trolled. it's too easy and almost unfair. two, three, or four terms of this. do they deliberately see jokes as the real thing or it really is a disorder? it's becoming one? >> dana: obviously that was funny. also he is 73. obviously not happening.
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obviously you can't have more than two terms. it takes a constitutional amendment. if you talk about abolishing the electoral college, all of a sudden, that's actually real. that's not a joke. >> greg: good point. >> jesse: i like watching the democrats chase their own tail. they are humorless. it is so stupid. it's like what you said in the beginning, if trump tweets something that he's never going to leave, then they say he's not going to leave and then they asked and he says i'm joking and then they story saying the president might not be joking. when in fact it is hillary and the left to hasn't accepted the last results of the election. they called him a legitimate russian hacker for two years. then you have all the holdovers like yates and mccabe and comey trying to undermine him from within. they are trying to give the democrats a shot of adrenaline
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saying that you need to beat trump by a larger margin. you have to beat him handily in the electoral college. this guy is a felon. he's a cheater, will include her. if it's really close come he's going to say there's fraud. he's going to say you cheated when he is going to stay in office i think that's the strategy. >> greg: what is the amendment that limits your terms? >> juan: you are talking about article to an article two establishes the executive branch and says it's two terms. >> greg: his next thing would be we should repeal it. >> juan: the thing about it, on the one hand, i said this before. at the end of 2016, people asked what happens if he loses he says maybe, maybe not all except the results. i don't know if he was joking there but that's what he said. then he says to chuck todd in the same interview, he says you know, i won the popular vote and
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chuck's is what you're talking about? he says judicial watch had a suit in california. that suit was about people who were -- should have been taken on the registration rolls. no evidence of fraudulent voting. the question is why are we having this segment? [laughter] you know why we're doing it -- >> greg: it's fun! >> lisa: you just proved greg's points. the left cannot have fun. >> juan: he says things that make you wonder, does he have authoritarian instincts? >> come on! >> lisa: how can you not crack up? i love the fact that he's doing more these mainstream interviews because it's hilarious. the scene with stephanopoulos in the car and collusion made me laugh out loud. you benefit by not overreacting to it because he would be less inclined to want to do it. it's not just hillary clinton that can't accept the results of the election for 2016.
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stacey abram saying she still governor of georgia. she lost. you have people like joe biden pete buttigieg, democrats that no better saying somehow she would've been the governor of georgia despite the fact that the 2010 midterm elections in georgia were near presidential levels and turn out. no one was suppressed. there was a tremendous amount of people that turned out. she just lost. they didn't vote for her. >> juan: brian kemp, who is now the governor, was the attorney general. >> lisa: stacey abrams is not governor. >> juan: my point is the president is a powerful man. we should not be sitting here having to debate, is he joking? >> greg: it's fun! we are not debating it! we're not debating he's joking because we know he's joking. >> juan: was he joking in
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2016? >> jesse: florida. maybe gore -- chuck todd should be asking a democrat, will you accept the results of the 2020 election? >> juan: she says she doesn't consider him a legitimate governor. i think al gore conceded. hillary clinton conceded. >> dana: al gore and stacy adams had a different -- >> juan: stacy abram's. >> greg: coming up, mayor pete heads back to indiana for a town hall and chaos erupts. >> do you want our vote, which i doubt you're going to get it. do you have a moral compass? >> greg: under fire from his own community. does it spell trouble for his candidacy? with accident forgiveness
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♪ >> dana: mayor pete buttigieg facing angry constituents in south bend while taking a break from the campaign trail. he held a town hall where he came under intense scrutiny from residents who blamed him for not being present enough after the deadly shooting of a black man by a white police officer. >> sure. if everyone -- we are going to allow him to speak. if everyone can just calm down. >> dana: we know the debates are coming up this week. somewhat difficult, if you already have a job, if you are a governor or mayor where you are in charge of things to also run for president of the same time. everyone is going to save ben away. it's all your fault.
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these guys, if your mayor, you need face-to-face contact with people. unlike if you're in washington. >> greg: it's so funny to because this applies more to mayor de blasio than the this guy because de blasio is far worse mayor than mayor pete. everyone is doing a segment on mayor pete. some guy almost nobody knew for months ago and that's the curse of the spotlight. the spotlight cuts both ways. he was probably thinking in his head, you know what, i'm not going to end up being the nominee but this going to be good for me later because my face will be -- i'll be on the debates and everyone will think i'm awesome but then people find out you can't even run your city. how are you going to run a country? it's really hard and that kind of situation to remain calm when you are faced with an emotional situation. looking down at your notes and saying, you know, i didn't ask you to vote for me. he came off as as a really small
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candidate. what is presidential? i hate to say presidential. [laughter] >> dana: there is a city councilman named oliver davis, the longest-serving black member of the council, he has basically said he appreciates that he was there and he said very few people could have withstood what he went through without completely losing it. do you think mayor pete should not go to the debates this week and focus on his job as mayor or go to the debate and face the possible backlash from people saying that he should be at home working on the issue. >> juan: i think he should go to the debate. he's running for president buddies got to be able to handle both at one time. this is the reality of a guy who's a small town mayor. you've got to be able to deal with crisis because on the national level, you're going to have to deal with people who really are angry at you and screaming they be threatening in a way that -- >> dana: i think as mayor, you
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see people more face-to-face. >> juan: the guy that you cited, they longest-serving member of the council in south bend said that he not only talked to the press before he talked to the family. he then went on to not attend a vigil where you could get face-to-face and let people understand we are coming from. he has never explained why the body cam on the police officer didn't work. >> dana: wasn't turned on. >> juan: i don't know. said didn't work. you see a decline in terms of the percentage of black people on the police force during his term and he fired the black police chief. there is a lot going on here that's kind of invented. maybe it's the history that smell come to bite him. >> dana: basically a one-two punch. there's the loss of life and then the communities frustration and the questions about what happened. also it's an area where he is already politically weak. >> jesse: he can't afford to lose black support. he is close to zero this is
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really going to hurt him. he handled it poorly. as juan said, he skipped the vigil, called the meanie of the hoary talk to the family. the to have him on a lectern, detached, motionless, not responding passionately to the anger and pain from his own community was awful. he needs to get out on the streets. he needs to get into neighborhoods. he needs to hug people and see their tears and respond and immerse himself in the english. there is an opportunity here. he needs to nationalize this issue if he wants any hope for a rebounding from this. he needs to make it a core issue. he needs to talk about it at the debate and that's the only shot he has. he did handle a few things well. talking about bringing the doj and, appointing an independent prosecutor. he's taken a little ownership of it but it's a murky situation because of the body cam on the
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fact that the victim's body was transported not by an ambulance by a police vehicle. at the same time, the guy allegedly threw a knife at the officer, was rummaging around cars, and has a rap sheet with weapons and cocaine charges. you don't really know what the truth was. >> lisa: you had mentioned african-american voters and that's particularly troubling for them if you look at states like south carolina where black voters make up about 60% of the democratic primary votes. it's going to be a big challenge for him. if you're using as your mail record a launchpad, the record comes under scrutiny in your called out for not being strong, what do you have to run on? it's going to be the challenge. there's no reasoning with an angry mob. when people are upset, they are yelling in emotions are high, he's trying to reason. there's no reasoning. that's also a challenge, trying to talk to some people because they're angry.
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>> juan: i don't think that was a mama. they were -- they weren't attacking anybody. steve i want people are screaming at you. >> dana: local politics is some of the hardest politics. all politics is local. there you have it. >> greg: juan brought up biden. ed rendell said this could be a generational thing. it's not just old guys like biden facing the accusation of racial insensitivity. it's going to keep coming up. >> dana: good point. i'm glad you made it. bernie sanders upping the stakes before the big democratic debate this week. his free college tuition plan but who's going to pay for that? up next.
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socialist bernie sanders is up to his old tricks. this time revealing a big government plan to write about $1.6 trillion, with a t, in student loan debt owed by more than 40 millions americans. >> today we are offering a revolutionary proposal. this proposal completely eliminates student debt in this country and ends the absurdity of sentencing an entire generation, the millennial generation, to a lifetime of debt. we will make a full and complete education a human right in america. it's time to hit the reset button. under the proposal we introduced today, all student debt would be canceled in six months. >> jesse: how is crazy bernie going to pay for it? he plans to tax wall street. this coming two days before the first democratic presidential debate. what i found interesting, a lot
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of interesting things, it's not as progressive as he sells it. a lot of these people taking out loans are graduate school people. he is bailing out phds, mbas, people in the highest income bracket. >> dana: this plus medicare for all, which he is also four. when they said it would cost $32 trillion to pay for medicare for all, bernie sanders and his people said yeah, that's probably about right. that's fine. the idea smelt on contact with the second question. the gentlest pushback makes him go wait, would it be retroactive? why is it just millennials? why should it just be teachers and not phds. if this happens, she college employees, teachers beyond government level salaries? are we going to do that? all those type of things, they go actually were not for that.
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is there something we should do as a country to get a handle on it? is it a slow moving train where you're going to have to bail out banks again because you're going to have all these people in debt, and the government put forward a bill in 2007 for people that went into public service and said if you have a student loan debt, will try to help you figure out a way. but then it wasn't executed well. basically it's up and they are so -- i understand the struggle and i think there should be some more innovative ways to try to address it. just paying it all off willy-nilly is probably not going to fly. >> jesse: greg, this doesn't address going forward the high cost of tuition. >> greg: i'm happy that you said willy-nilly. it's not used on tv enough. i don't believe this is a struggle. the average student debt, lowest is 18 grand in the highest is 31 grand in new york city. that's about the same as an auto loan. we aren't getting emotional over peoples car loans, are we question what we are not saying oh! when someone says my poor pickup cost me 300 bucks a month, like yeah but you love that truck.
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he gets you to work. your education gets you to work. to your point, we are bailing out people who are kind of rok. i would be for his payment mechanism, if it were for veterans or something like that. the payment mechanism is interesting. it's basically taxing -- to whatever. >> jesse: a slick way. it's like taxing wall street. >> greg: i don't think loans should just be canceled at all. that is the foundation of basically financial life. if you want a house or car or education, you get alone. alone means it's a loan. it doesn't -- it's not free. it's the entire system that allows people to afford something they couldn't afford. if you pull the rug out, what's left? then you're going to have -- when you're getting on loan for your house, they're going to add another sheet they have to sign
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to forfeit future debt forgiveness. they're just going to have to add something else that says you promised. that's what you're going to have to do. if loans don't mean anything, you're not going to have anymore loans. >> lisa: if you took out tons of debt to get a women's studies degree from harvard or something, i don't feel bad for you because that was a dumb decision. you should bear the consequences. what's hilarious, it's an elitist proposal because as you mentioned, the higher earners of the ones that make up a disproportionate amount of the student loan debt. it also ends up being a bailout for universities because they know they're ultimately going to get a payout so that's not good. this is obviously a direct play for political purposes, trying to outdo elizabeth warren and her free college tuition et cetera, et cetera. he crushed it with millennials in 2016, so this is also a plate of those people to say hey, come vote for me and support me. >> jesse: don't get into a bidding war with a socialist. i will see your 2 trillion.
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>> greg: playing with the casinos chips. >> jesse: house money. >> juan: i can't believe you guys some days. this is a real serious issue for people with unbearable student debt. >> greg: unbearable. >> juan: let me say historically i think i'm surrounded by republicans who would say we have to have responsible spending. but i noticed that at the moment, we have rising debt, rising deficits, and i don't hear any hawkish talk from republicans. this is wasteful. secondly, guess what. debt relief for students means you have more educated people, people who therefore earn more money, people who are taxed more, more productive citizens. this is important, and it's a serious problem. to make it out like these are a bunch of bombs, this is wrong. >> greg: no one said bums. you are making it like it's no big deal, just give them the money. >> juan: no. i'm saying that we as americans,
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we are right to make an investment in educating our people. young people who wouldn't have opportunity if it wasn't for education, we should be supporting it. >> lisa: wyatt about the fact that it ends up benefiting the rich? >> juan: it benefits us as the american people. >> dana: what about people who paid off their loans four years ago? >> greg: reparations for people who already paid. >> juan: reparations, we did for wall street. main street, take a walk. we're going to bail you out, wall street. taxing stock transactions, bond transactions. i think that's legitimate. >> jesse: all right. next on "the five," another fan struck by a fall ball during a major league baseball game yesterday. will major league baseball start taking stadium safety more seriously? hmm. exactly. liberty mutual customizes your car insurance, so you only pay for what you need. nice. but, uh... what's up with your... partner?
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♪ >> lisa: a scary scene that's become all too familiar baseball stadiums across the country. a fan, a young woman was hospitalized after being struck by a hard-hitting foul ball at dodger stadium over the weekend. >> the 1-2 comes home and bellinger rifles it foul.
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just beyond the protective netting. cody said "smoked in the face." >> lisa: the disturbing trend that calls into question what major league baseball is doing to protect its fans. juan, you are the biggest fan among us. cody bellinger, the player who hit the young woman accidentally, said he support increased netting. do you support it questioning >> juan: yeah. my wife views it as a distraction from the game. you're not as close to the game as he would be without it but i think it's necessary. to my mind, getting hit by foul ball is pretty rare in the first place. you're more likely to get hit by a powerball. to me, you have a chance of getting hit by lightning but you still go outside. i would still go to the baseball game. i worry that there are people who will say they treasure being right there with the players and don't understand that it's really dangerous.
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>> lisa: jesse, does it take away the experience if you have netting in front of you. does objector view? does it take away from the experience? >> jesse: a little bit. let me assume the greg gutfeld commentary and say that we are over sensationalizing something that usually does not carry the risk everybody says it does. we ran the numbers. you like numbers, right, dana? automobile and motorcycle racing, cycling, cricket, hockey all account for much more fan deaths and injuries than baseball. they don't even include golf. i looked up the golf stats. brooks capa, phil mickelson, tiger woods have hit fans in the eye, head, face, neck recently. all those other sports seem much more dangerous than baseball. it's good to have perspective. >> lisa: do you know what is also dangerous? high school field hockey. i got hit in the head right here and i had to call black eyes for
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homecoming. you go to hockey games, baseball games, you see a puck fly in the air. don't you assume the risk when you go to a game? >> greg: that's not the real risk. the real risk is always in the restroom. [laughter] >> jesse: i agree. >> greg: i don't go to professional sports because of the conditions of their bathrooms. as somebody who grew up in the bay area, if you are at home and you'd been to candlestick park to see the san francisco giants are the 49ers and remembered the trough. when you are six or 7 years old and you've got to use the trough, where your head is at the need of grown men, you will never use the bathroom in a public -- any public setting again. i sympathize with the flying balls, but i'm telling you... >> dana: i think the bathrooms
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are better now these parts. >> greg: they are always bad. >> jesse: are you a season ticket holder? >> dana: no, i make it to one game a year. i am afraid to go to a baseball game because i am afraid of getting hit like this. for hockey, they raised the level of the protector. i think major league baseball is worried about losing fans. it's already hard for them to get people to watch on tv. they want families to be able to go. i think parents might choose not to go. i'm fine with whatever they decide. >> jesse: you can see it in other places. >> dana: in the box? >> jesse: you don't have to sit at the first baseline. >> greg: you're going to get hit by those sushi prices. >> juan: dana, what do you think is more dangerous, going to the baseball park or driving a car? >> dana: obviously driving a car. we have to end it there.
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>> lisa: fascinating discussion. "one more thing" is up next. e - we were making a move. we had to. we knew that if we came in too high, it would cost us big time. we had to stay low. and boy did we. we locked it in and rode that low rate from navy federal credit union all the way to our first house. it's a split-level ranch. so cute! navy federal credit union. our members, are the mission. openturning 50 opens theuard. door to a lot of new things... like now your doctor may be talking to you about screening for colon cancer. luckily there's me, cologuard. the noninvasive test you use at home. it all starts when your doctor orders me. then it's as easy as get, go, gone.
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with licensed agents available 24/7. it's not just easy. it's having-a-walrus-in-goal easy! roooaaaar! it's a walrus! ridiculous! yes! nice save, big guy! good job duncan! way to go!
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[chanting] it's not just easy. it's geico easy. oh, duncan. stay up. no sleepies. >> it's time now for one more thing. jesse? >> one of the best things to watch is in football practice when we have the lineman trying to steal the punts and try to call for fair catches. it's not easy being 300 pounds. there you go. nice catch. also someone who never drops the ball sean hannity who show airs friday night.
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>> u.k. an amazing discovery. they say gray seals with mimic the human voice. watch. that's not bad. that was university of st. andrews in scotland. they say they might be able to help speech therapy maybe some day for people. they could learn the words to a seal song. >> all right. animals are great. >> not that one. >> oh. these are. owls taking a bath. we got three owls taking a bath. i want you to vote which one is the sexiest. first owl taking a bath. check out that wingspan. that is a sexy owl. this is an elegant owl here. there he is getting himself cleaned. he's in a hurry. he's got a job interview in an
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hour. we got another owl. look at this little coy owl. he wants you to jump on him. you make me sick little owl. that's enough. one wins. >> all right. quickly, look up in the sky. it's a plane, it's a bird, no it's a wallenda. they're back. the brother-sister act, walked a tight rope between two skyscrapers in new york time square. it was a big risk for leann. she fell in 2017 shattered every bone in her face. dare devil act scene. they wore safety harness because of city law. you couldn't get me up there anyway. >> how is this for a greeting?
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>> yeah! >> a dad in maryland recorded picking up his son everyday for a month. >> set your dvr and next miss an episode. >> up next. high brett. >> brett: president trump goes directly after the ayatollah with new sanctions. the president pressures congress for immigration reform. we'll talk live acting director. south bend mayor, pete buttigieg takes time off to deal with a crises in his city. this is "special report with brett baier." good evening welcome to washington i'm bret baier. president trump is tightening economic vice on iran. he's aiming high. he's slapping new sanctions on the islamic republic including

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