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tv   The Five  FOX News  September 11, 2019 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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♪ >> dana: hello, everyone. i am dana perino with katie pavlich, juan williams, jesse watters, tom shillue. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five" ." it's been 18 years since the 9/11 terror attacks that killed nearly 3,000 people as america remembers and promises to never forget. president trump observing a moment of silence at the white house and honoring those who lost their lives at a ceremony at the pentagon where president george w. bush also paid tribute. earlier today, new york city mayor rudy giuliani revealing new details about a powerful conversation he had with president bush at the time.
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>> the anger was tremendous. when i saw president bush for the first time and he got off the helicopter, he greeted the governor, came up to me, there's a famous picture. he says to me rudy, what can i do? i said when you get bin laden, let me kill him. i might have said execute him. i think i was thinking as a lawyer. i thought there would be capital punishment and i could try a case. we only -- i only had two capital cases in my career. both were nazis. capital case is easy like that. >> dana: while the country reflects, the families of the victims are still looking for justice most specifically for admitted 9/11 mastermind khalid sheikh mohammed. his trial has faced numerous delays. a day of remembrance was not without controversy. emotions are running high at times. the son of a 9/11 victim going after congresswoman ilhan omar
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for her previous comments about the terror attacks. >> some people did something, set a freshman congresswoman from minnesota. the support and justified the creation of cair. we know who and what was done. there was no uncertainty. why your confusion? on that day, 19 islamic terrorists, members of al qaeda, killed over 3,000 people and cost billions of dollars of economic damage. is that clear? >> dana: part of never forgetting is being very specific and clear minded about what happened so the people who were not born yet can understand it in the future. i didn't realize you were in philadelphia on 9/11. >> jesse: i was and i was about 23 years old and for me my life breaks down into pre9/11 and post 9/11 because the america before that, it's hard for people to understand if they
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weren't they are. how it changed air travel, how it's changed how we feel vulnerable in the homeland, how we feel about privacy. deployment after deployment after deployment. it's important to hear things like what rudy giuliani said so everybody can reflect and remember and keep that flame alive. so when we say #neverforget, we actually know what we are talking about. i woke up this morning and watched "fox & friends" ." we only play this once a year where we show the footage of the planes hitting the towers and we show all of our anchors and correspondents report the attacks in real time and it's very important for all of us to do that. also very important, listen to the names that are red of those who passed away that day. you don't have to listen to every single. just a few. whatever it takes. it's a very sobering experience.
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also always a good day when you see a police officer or firefighter or service member, shake their hand and say thank you. we have talked about this. go to ari fleischer's twitter feed today and he will deliver a blow-by-blow of the events as his proximity to george w. bush was right there and he can tell you what went down that close to power and go online and watched two videos, george w. bush throwing out the first pitch at yankee stadium and him standing on top of the rubble with the bullhorn. if you have children, as i do, who were there or if you have children born after, explained to them what happens. maybe you visit the memorial or go to the freedom tower. it's important to survive generation after generation. >> dana: juan, you are a big baseball fan. i remember learning about derek jeter telling the president "don't bounce it."
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>> juan: he did such a great job, when he was standing on top of the rubble. >> dana: spontaneous moments. transformational moment for him. absolutely. not necessarily the bullhorn but knowing him the way i do and i think based on his reflections and if you read in his book, the moment that andy card comes into the elementary school, they were doing a "no child left behind" event and he whispers to the president and you can see it in his face. there we have it. what's interesting is in 2,000, -- 2000, you covered that election. neither gore nor bush was ever asked a single question about al qaeda that entire campaign season. >> juan: i was in washington, i was working for national public radio and i remember going home, getting off in the morning and it was the first time and i'd heard something happened in my thought is it an
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accident? by the time i got home, i turned on the tv and you could see what jesse was describing. the second plane hitting the building and at that moment being afraid for my son who was going to school across the river from the pentagon. not only talk about the pentagon but about whether or not there was another plane heading for the capital. vice president pence was in shanksville today and you did a wonderful segment. >> dana: i learned this from greg gutfeld. the first act of counter terrorism, the remarkable amount of heroism. the people voted on the plane before they rushed the cockpit. i wanted to ask about, your girls are a little older than jesse's, how they think about or do you talk about? >> tom: we do talk about it. my wife and i, we weren't married but it was new in our relationship and that was a very sobering time obviously. i was doing stand-up.
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a lot of people went right back on stage and said we've got to do our shows. i took the rest of the month off. i didn't want to do shows. it was quite a time. we talk about it. the thing that hit me today, the guest on "outnumbered," he said the people born on that day can vote today. 18 years. that was amazing. every time we have this anniversary, i can't believe how long ago it was because it seems like yesterday. >> dana: there is a great book called "the only plane in the sky," they missed the flight or they were supposed to be on this flight, all the possible disasters their own lives that could've happened and it's all collected in this book. >> katie: people who are running late. today i've been reflecting about my own generation. one of the biggest things we could have gone through and how grateful i am that i have had friends who went into the
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military right after high school because of 9/11 and then moving into a professional career in washington, d.c., in meeting these amazing people who went into the intelligence services, counterterrorism work, went into the cia, worked at the state department, still doing that work and dedicating their lives and careers to fighting this evil. when you drive past the pentagon, when you're driving towards washington, d.c., on the left side is arlington cemetery. plot 60 is a lot of men and women who served overseas. >> dana: pretty transformational time. we will switch gears, new fallout oversee's tannins rush our spy report. jesse has it next. ♪ limu emu & doug
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network under fire for another botched trump-russia report. they claim the president was the reason why a cia spy was extracted from russia. the story has been debunked by numerous outlets and it turns out trump had nothing to do with it and wasn't even in office when the decision was made. despite all of that, cnn still reported that this morning. new numbers show the network spent hundred 81 minutes hyping the so-called bombshell this week. it's not just cnn that's clinging to the bogus story. check out what nbc asked former
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secretary of state condi rice. >> do you think it's possible that russia's election interference actually worked? it actually elected donald trump? >> i don't think there's any evidence of that i really don't think that's a good conversation to have. i think it really does devalue the people in wisconsin and michigan and others who decided to vote for president trump, whether you like this president or not. whether you believe he should have been president or not. let's give the credit to the americans went out and voted for somebody who they thought would bring change. >> jesse: juan, i have a theory. i think you might agree. >> juan: i am looking forward to it. >> jesse: i think the media might help get donald trump reelected and here's why. all they do is report on donald trump. fake news, sharpie gate and they give no room for any of the democrats running for president. you don't hear anything about any of the other democrats. it's trump 24/7 and i think it's to the detriment of the
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democrats running. >> juan: i understand your point. he takes up so much air in the room. >> jesse: they give it to him. >> juan: boy, do we give it to him. [laughter] i think every political conversation tends to always come back to donald trump. he is still the 100-pound gorilla or whatever, 800-pound gorilla in the room. >> dana: 100-pound gorilla. [laughter] that's my size. [laughter] that's not a very big gorilla. >> juan: he is the biggest of the big ones. also with the chaos, like yesterday with john bolton leaving and the arguments from the previous weekend with the idea of bringing the taliban to camp david. imagine, today. 9/11. it would have been awful. the media has to cover the president. he's the president of the united states but your point is well taken and i do agree with you. >> jesse: there you go! if we could only do that every
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show. what do you think, tom? >> tom: cnn, i love the nbc clip and i love condi rice with the push back. she almost was too nice. she said that's not a conversation we should have. how about "stop saying that." stop saying that russia got trump elected. they are still doing it. so they are still going to play it regardless, this story that's been debunked and cnn is going to let it fade away but they're going to keep up the russia thing and they're going to keep up the "did the russians get trump elected?" >> jesse: 181 minutes. th p but that's a nice thing for you to say about them. the interesting thing to me is that cnn and savannah guthrie claim to be concerned about russia interference in the election but anytime she says and gives russia credit for
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maybe tilting the election towards president trump, she's actually emboldening russian propaganda and giving russia a win and every single time that someone at cnn reports a story incorrectly, and puts a cia source at risk, and the russians think -- it's a huge problem. you are setting up a situation where americans are debating about the russia issue and tearing each other apart politically which the one thing in the mueller report that we know is true, that was one of the goals when the russians to the facebook ads, twitter troll farms, to sow dissent in america. every time the media acts like they are concerned about information and worried about protecting sources, they have exposed the source and they have emboldened the russian propaganda by continuing to give russia credit to one of the theories, dana, floating around right now, the person who
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was an asset in the kremlin, people think he was the one that gave all the disinformation about donald trump to christopher steele, which he cooked the dossier up wife and that's why he was brought out of that country. >> dana: maybe that's why cnn is clinging to their story? >> jesse: i think they are trying to get ahead of it. >> dana: everyone is on pins and needles waiting for that. when secretary rice talks about it, she understands russians very well. it's giving russians way too much credit. it's building them up to up point of ridiculousness. the thing she didn't say, she was very polite, didn't say it. but if that were true, where was the obama administration? they have responsibility for election security in the united states and i don't know that will be part of the durham investigation but i feel like they kind of get off easy because no one talks about it.
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the other thing i would point out is in the olden days, like ten years ago, there was really no way to fight back when the reporter wouldn't back down, even if you knew the story wasn't true. if they wouldn't retract it, you could complain a little bit. you could try to get it out but there was no twitter. there was no facebook. there was no direct way to communicate directly to people to say that story is wrong. i think it's helped, social media has been a good leveling of the playing field. >> jesse: so you like when the president tweets "fake news"? >> juan: let me rebut some of this because i don't agree with it. cnn, i don't think they have acted recklessly. they are standing by the story because they believe and they said, "partly responsible," anxiety or the fact that the president with having meetings in the oval office with the russians. later, a president who stood by vladimir putin and said i believe him, not americans. >> jesse: even though
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"the washington post," "the new york times," the cia, saying that wasn't the case. >> juan: both "the new york times" and cnn went to the administration before they ran their story and asked. there was no danger. the russians knew this guy, knew where he was. nobody's life was in danger. that's not true. what i would say is you have a situation where cnn, when they were found to be wrong, i think it was a story about scaramucci, they fired three people. >> jesse: they should fire everybody because they were wrong about russia collusion. >> juan: they were not. >> jesse: juan is clinging. you are clinging. >> juan: you said, you're acting like russia didn't interfere. wait, hold it. russian propaganda didn't influence votes? >> jesse: talking about collusion, not interference. >> juan: we have a picture of obama staring down at putin and saying stop it. >> jesse: did it work?
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really listened. >> juan: trying to get mitch mcconnell, put out a bipartisan statement. >> dana: all of the blame and sup -- >> katie: it's what the russians want, right here. >> dana: the obama administration has been very skillful in trying to cast all of the blame against trump and the russians when they really were in charge of election security. >> juan: what would you have had them do? >> dana: do you think hillary clinton thinks obama should have done something more? guaranteed. >> juan: what would trump and the republicans have said? putting your finger on the scale for hillary. >> jesse: they were worried about politics, not national security. california's homeless crisis spiraling out of control, with trash, rats, threats of a plague. president trump says he's ready to stop it. what he's planning to do, ahead. moving into our new apartment.
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♪ >> katie: president trump has been railing against california's homeless crisis. >> what they are doing to our beautiful california is a disgrace to our country. look at los angeles, with the attendance and the horrible, horrible, disgusting conditions. >> katie: he's ready to take action. the president sending a fact-finding team to figure out how to stop the epidemic of trash, rodent infestation, and threats have a plague outbreak. local officials are telling him to stay away. democrat state senator sang "trump needs to back off and focus on his own mess of an administration." dana, seems like the mayor's office in l.a. is welcoming them, at least have a conversation. >> dana: this is pretty interesting. the whole posse comitatus, can the government, and to take care of something? what would be the reason?
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a dangerous health problem? at some point, the government can't just go in unless they are invited to come in. or if the president decides that might be something they could do. he might be saying we can help you. we have a plan. i don't know what that is. i would be interested to find out. i also think it's really interesting because the president is saying let's just do something. he saying let's do something about it. here's another thing, i'm not saying this is why he's doing it. could be the result of it. imagine you're in california, your taxpayer. you've had had it. we can't take it anymore. the president says i will try to do something. the popular vote hillary clinton won, this could be something that helps president trump. i'm not saying he's going to win the popular vote but it could decrease the democratic edge if he were able to win a few more seats in california. >> katie: some of the ideas
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are raising existing camps for the homeless and creating new temporary facilities. the federal government would need permission to do that but there's been talk about fema coming in because the encampments are 30,000 people strong. >> jesse: imagine trump sends fema to california. all hell would break loose. so many parts of this country that washington politicians have totally abandoned over the last couple decades. the industrial midwest, steel country, call country, now they are leaving behind large parts of the urban areas. baltimore, north philadelphia, southside chicago, downtown los angeles. washington will so you -- show you so much love if you are producing, you're innovating. the research triangle in north carolina. getting so much love. denver, colorado, so much love. silicon valley, the navy yard here in brooklyn. showered with love and attention and funding but the minute the economic wind blows the other
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way, washington is like leaving them high and dry and hollowed out and trump is unique. he's going to these decaying parts of the country and he is saying we are going to revitalize this part of america and here's how we are going to do it. not chasing the wind and the other direction. i wish democrats would recognize this and say we can work with this president on certain issue issues. homelessness, opioids, infrastructure. the nafta deal that is sitting on nancy's desk decaying. if they could wise up and think about how we could make america great again and get the politics out of it, we could get a lot of things done. >> juan: wow. the problem is republicans opinion weaponizing this issue to go after democrats. big cities having problems with the homeless. in the course of it, then demonizing people who are addicts or traumatized veterans are people who are mentally ill. >> jesse: i disagree with that
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strongly. >> juan: i think that's deplorable. i must say i've been on the show encouraging that if the president is sincere, if he's serious, then offer ideas and go out there and take a look and see what you can do. >> tom: but they say don't come. >> juan: he's not been doing that. he's been using it as a political attack and i think it's more than a political attack. why not open their hearts, if you're a democrat or big-city leader and say mr. president, do you have ideas we haven't thought of? do you have funding that can you can bring to the table. to me the bigger story, the indication of how this is being politicized by the republicans, the bigger story today is the fact that we have more people who don't have health insurance in the country then in the last decade. that doesn't get the attention. it's not politically beneficial to trump. >> katie: speaking of politics, what if local officials were to invite the trump administration income it would be an admission that things are out of control and their policies have failed and they need help from a republican
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president. that might be why they're not inviting him. >> tom: they invite him and then try his solutions and if they don't work, they can say his solutions didn't work either. i printed out my headlines and i left them outside my office. "new york times," trump plans crackdown on homeless. "washington post," cracked down. they both use the word crackdown. there's no crackdown. i'm trying to think if it was the headline in the obama administration. the headline would've been obama administration offers assistance to california. >> katie: jesse, shouldn't there be some headlines that say "democrats in san francisco enable homelessness problem?" >> jesse: they don't write critical stories about that. they will only criticize republicans who have ideas to fix it. >> juan: how does anyone enable someone who's mentally ill or addicted to be homeless? >> katie: there is plenty of enabling going on in places like san francisco and l.a. fight democratic officials who want to make it easier for homeless people to live on the streets
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rather than getting them mental health and addiction help. >> juan: it's offensive. >> jesse: we showed video of rats scurrying all over the place. >> juan: you can show video of rats scurrying outside the studio. >> jesse: i haven't seen any rats. >> dana: here is something the federal government could do. people are illegally dumping trash in those areas. the federal government, u.s. attorney's office could possibly work with local officials and prosecute those offenders and make it really count. a federal offense rather than a state offense. >> tom: rat can hold the slice of pizza. we have seen that. >> jesse: pizza rat. >> katie: a massive -- note america's war on opioids, details on that when we return. memory support brand. you can find it in the vitamin aisle in stores everywhere.
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>> juan: a major battle in america's opioids crisis. new york governor andrew cuomo announcing plans for a massive against drugmakers. accusing the companies of causing "immeasurable damage." the governor claiming drug producers have been ripping off his state to the tune of $2 billion. other stories raising concerns. a new "washington post" story saying the opioid crackdown is forcing chronic pain patients to taper off them. the maker of oxycontin, purdue pharma, reportedly reaching a $12 billion agreement to settle thousands of opioid cases. dana, not only that, apparently the family uses control -- loses control of purdue pharma. >> dana: i think they probably want to lose control. i think the $12 billion settlement, looks like it would hurt a lot. it's not going to cover with the cities, states, and some of the
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counties are asking for. it's pretty amazing how many lawsuits have been filed against them because everyone is chasing it. they are looking for a consolidation. they do not have enough money to pay out all of those claims. if purdue decides to make that decision, hopefully it will go a long way. i do think it's an interesting problem about what's happening to people who actually do have chronic pain. purdue pharma, whatever the culpability, whatever they admit to, set it aside. there's a black market problem, an illegal market problem and it's because people who deserve the care they can be given to have to suffer. that's really wrong. we don't live with chronic pain. we don't know what it's like. it destroys your life. what i pray for is an amazing innovation, something that will deal with people's pain in a way that doesn't cause the
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additional problems. i also think the federal government's crackdown on the black market and the illegal mixing of drugs is so critical beyond this settlement. >> juan: it's an interesting conversation, katie. there are people who need pain medication but the same time we are talking public policy. without a doubt we've had an opioid epidemic. how do you balance it and are we at the point where we should be concerned about individuals who say i need the medication, versus a large number of people who we know have become addicted, if not dying from the abuse of opioids. >> katie: a woman's stepson's father committed suicide because he was not able to get proper opioid treatment for severe pai pain. there is a serious consequence to overdoing it on one side. the front and back, they are assigning and prescribing these opioids and not thinking about what the consequences might be
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and telling people they need them and over prescribing them. have these efforts to throw things away, didn't use them, keep them out of the hands of kids. the pharmacy companies are just the surface. you'll have to look at the insurance companies as well because when you go into get an mri and this has happened to someone i know, you get in mri. if you are too young where they don't want to do it, they will say we know you're in a lot of pain. you have to wait six months were going to give you opioids and if you're still having a problem, will grant you the mri even though you have health insurance or we could pay out-of-pocket. the insurance companies aren't paying for things that would maybe fix the problem through some other means. then the doctors are assigning opioids to people who will take them and become addicted. >> juan: jesse, where'd you come out on this? >> jesse: these brilliant manufacturers have these amazing scientists and they poured hundreds of millions of dollars
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into r and d and they created a perfect pill, too good. that was over prescribed. you get into a car accident, here's a pill. you're back from iraq or afghanistan, here's a pill. your back hurts. here's 20 pills. it's over prescribed and it floods the market, especially the black market. it's on the street and everybody gets hoped and starts dying so you can't put the genie back in the bottle because those with a legitimate need for a ten only people who can solve it are the lawyers. so lawyers on both sides are going to get so rich figuring it out and the only way i can think about doing it, a few things. go after the illicit distribution networks. there is one small town, population 40 in west virginia and there's a zillion pills. you have to limited dosages, quantity. you don't need so many. you need to limited to a certain
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extent. it sounds corny but there has to be an alternative cover may be non-western healing method that's not a narcotic. not vaping. i'm not saying yoga but there's got to be something that can maybe deter. >> tom: marianna's on the line and she wants to talk to you. [laughter] >> jesse: i knew i was going to get hit for that. >> juan: tom, i was, say there is one state, connecticut, refusing to join in the settlement. they say they want more of the personal fortune that the sacklers amassed, they have said that this sacklers haven't put enough into it. are we making them into villains unfairly? >> tom: it's easier to go after the usual suspects. they're going to make this deal. everybody wants to settle these things because that's what you do. you want to get it out of the way. but i think it's not going to
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make the problem go away. we are singing the same tune. it's an overcorrection. we shouldn't overcorrect. dr. should be afraid to prescribe pain medication. the crackdown will be worse than the epidemic. people need these medications. people tweet, i'm in pain. help support me. people feel very strongly. >> dana: what's really troubling is they are in pain and when you're in pain, you get desperate. when you are desperate, if you can't get it legally, you will find it illegally and that's when you have this artificial counterfeit stuff coming in. >> juan: it's terrible. important conversation for us to have. hollywood actress debra messing is added again, see why she's facing more backlash. that's next right here on "the five." i get it all the time.
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♪ >> tom: anti-trump hollywood liberal debra messing is at it again, fresh off her call to out trumped donors, she is raising eyebrows for retreating an outrageous insult against the president's family. the tweet calling ivanka trump and jared kushner national security threats. jesse, i feel bad for debra messing and i will tell you why
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in a minute but let's make fun of her for a little while first. >> jesse: why would you go to me for that? i think debra messing should stay off twitter. take the l from last week, cool off, listen to your group. your entourage knows what's best. go on a hiatus, colored winter vacation and come back refreshed and you can dip your toes back in. >> tom: does she have an entourage? >> jesse: all of these hollywood people have people. you know that. she's got publicists, managers, lawyers. >> katie: and they all agree with her. [laughter] >> tom: e member the boy in the plastic bubble, the john travolta film. he didn't know what the world outside was like and that is what she is like. she's going to continue doing this because she doesn't know the world outside her bubble. >> dana: attention is a hell
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of a week. last week she thought she had a great week. don't you think? it's good for her tension level. >> jesse: she likes the attention. >> dana: it wasn't like i touched the hot stove. i shouldn't do it again. she was like, i know what all do. i will add the president's children. >> tom: do you know anyone else who impulsively tweets to get attention. is there anyone else like that? >> juan: i am straining. this is one of tom's quizzes. look. debra messing, jim carrey says some crazy stuff. i'm amused that you pay so much attention because i am on their side of the aisle and i think these people have no relevance to a political conversation. to me, it's like when the right gets focused on jon voight or kid rock or who else do you love to pay attention to? >> dana: clint eastwood. >> juan: kanye west.
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i'm thinking i don't take political advice or consult from these folks. i think it becomes like anyone in hollywood who was a platform who affirms my position, going to like them. anyone who contradicts me, i'm going to say -- >> jesse: when clint eastwood was up at the rnc doing his thing, you are all over that. kanye west, you are all over that. you didn't act like that was no big deal. >> juan: invited him up there, that was the ridiculous part. >> jesse: i think he was invited. >> juan: by the republicans, by romney. a lot of people so that was a mistake and they shouldn't of done it. >> katie: the one guy in hollywood was actually a conservative. >> juan: kid rock, ted nugent. >> katie: the population of leftists in hollywood. >> juan: i don't see why we pay attention to any of it unless it is to mock them. >> tom: what is the jared kushner thing? who is calling them national security -- >> dana: sorry. >> katie: i don't want to turn
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the segment into a walkie situation because we are supposed to be having fun. >> dana: you and i are very good at it. >> katie: the security clearance, with how they got their security clearances and whether they got them because the president went around the system and demanded -- >> jesse: bringing peace to the middle east. >> juan: [laughs] i must've missed that headline. we have a peace plan now. >> tom: all right, "one more thing" is up next. every american wants their dollars to work as hard as they do. however, since 2000, the buying power of the dollar has dropped by over 31% - that means the dollar is only worth about 68¢ now... compared to 2000. had you owned gold, your value would have increased by over 400%. and owning gold is easy... with rosland capital - a trusted leader in helping people acquire precious metals. gold bullion, lady liberty gold and silver proofs,
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cardiologist-prescribed blood thinner. ask your doctor if eliquis is what's next for you. ever since you brought me home, that day. i've been plotting to destroy you. sizing you up... calculating your every move. you think this is love? this is a billion years of tiger dna just ready to pounce. and if you have the wrong home insurance coverage, you could be coughing up the cash for this. so get allstate and be better protected from mayhem, like me-ow. ♪ >> time now for a "one more thing." >> did you notice anything but yesterday's date, september 10th? yesterday was the first of ten straight days in which every day
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will be a palindrome. which means, you can write the date backward and it will still be the same date. take a look at how this amazing run of dates look when written in reverse, it's on the screen. this week of palindromes is a once-in-a-lifetime event. personally i always notice the rush of people that get married on dates like 7-7-17, and we could have a week of celebrations coming up in a few days left on the ten day run. my attention was called to this by meteorologist tyler lender. thanks so much. that was awesome. >> i love palindromes. >> i love palindromes but maybe not to lead one more thing. >> i'm kidding. so for military working dogs were honored for their service at the american humane's fourth canine award ceremony in washington. one of them is sergeant yeager, a black lab trained as an ied
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detection dog that has survived an explosion that did take the life of his handler. nico the dutch shepard also went over 600 missions in afghanistan something out ieds and he also protected embassies and u.s. dignitaries that visited. the other dogs honored include troll, a dutch shepherd who conducted a denied missions in the air force. they are cute and they also do a lot . >> another cute story , a student in oklahoma city got the ultimate surprise. take a look at this. 9-year-old trey was blindfolded and spun around a bunch of times, he had no idea what was coming next until they take off the blindfold. >> oh, dear. >> father is in the air force, and they got to reunite. so that was very touching.
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you know what else was touching? wednesdays with waters. the more, thursdays with waters. >> would you think it was touching if you were on with one, too? >> sure. i'll reach out and touch him. obviously tributes from all around the world are pouring in from 9/11 but take a look at this powerful performance by new zealand firefighters? >> the firefighters are
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performing a traditional ceremonial dance known as the under the highest tower in auckland which is the tallest freestanding structure in the southern hemisphere. senator scott brown tweeted out the video and after the performance more than 200 firefighters took part in the stair climb up that tower to remember the sacrifice that the firefighters need. >> the scott brown? from massachusetts? >> the scott brown. >> cb three circles of tray phobia is when people see groups of circles grouped together, it gives them anxiety. it seems weird, but if the real thing. i've heard a lot about this. i would never be triggered by these three circles but i almost got it when you have a lot of circles.
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>> we never miss an episode of "the five." "special report" is up next. >> bret: sometimes i have five hand off of phobia. we've heard eyewitness accounts of the tragic day. the president makes a move on e-cigarettes as health officials try to discover this because of hundreds of long illnesses. and we ride along with the u.s. military as they helps hurricane survivors in the bahamas. this is "special report." >> bret: a good evening and welcome to washington, i'm bret baier. tonight people all over the country are marking the

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