tv The Ingraham Angle FOX News August 19, 2020 11:00pm-12:00am PDT
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we are grieving the loss of life , the loss of jobs, the loss of opportunities, the loss of normalcy, and yes, the loss of certainty.an and while this virus touches us all, we have to be honest, it i not an equal opportunity offender. black, latino, and indigenous people are suffering and dying disproportionately. this is not a coincidence, it i the effect of isstructural raci. of inequities in education and technology, healthcare and housing, job security and transportation. the injustice in reproductive ucand maternal health care, and the excessive use of force by police. and in our broader criminal justice jsystem.
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this virus has no eyes, and yet it knows. exactly how we see each other and how we treat each other. let's be clear, there is no vaccine for racism. we have got to do the work. for george floyd, for breonna taylor and for the lives of too many others to name, and for ou children, and for all of us. we have got to do the work to fulfill that promise of equal justice under law. because here is the thing, none of us are free until all of us are free.ti so we are at an inflection point , the constant chaos leaves
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us adrift, the incompetence makes us feel afraidid. the callousness makes us feel alone. that is a lot. and here's the thing, we can do better and deserve so much more. we must elect a president who will bring something different, something better, and do the important work. a president who will bring all of us together, black, white, latino, asian, indigenous, to achieve that the feature we collectively want. we must elect joe biden. i will tell you, i knew joe as vice president cobra i knew joe on the campaign trail, and i first got to know joe as the
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father of my friend. so his son and eyes served as attorneys general of our states delaware and california. duringca the great recession, h and i spoke on the phone nearly every day working together to win back billions of dollars from homeowners from the big banks that foreclosed on people 's homes. in we would talk about his family. how as a single father, joe would spend four hours every da riding the train back and forth from wilmington to washington, beau and hunter got to have breakfast every morning with their dad too. they went thto sleep every nigh with the sound of his voice reading bedtime stories. and while they endured an unspeakable loss, those two little boys always knew that they were ysdeeply,
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unconditionally loved. and what also moved me about joe , is the work that he did as he was going back and forth. this is the leader who wrote th violence against women act, and enacted the assault weapons ban who as vice president, implemented the recovery act, which brought our country back from the great recession. he championed the affordable care act, protecting millions o americans with pre-existing conditions. to spent decades promoting american values and interest around the world. joe, he believes we stand with our allies and stand up to our adversaries.rs right now, we have a president who turns our tragedies into political weapons.
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joe will be a president who turns our challenges into purpose, joe will bring us together to build an economy that doesn't leave anyone behind . where a good paying job is the floor, not the ceiling. joe will bring us together to end this pandemic and make sure that we are preparednd for the next one. joe will bring us together to squarely face and dismantle racial injustice furthering the work of generations. joe and i believe that we can build that beloved community, one that is strong, and decent, just in kind, one in which we can all see ourselves. that is the vision that our
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parents and grandparents fought for. the vision that made my own lif possible. the vision that makes the american promise for all its complexities and imperfections promise worth fighting for. so make no mistake, the road ahead is not easy. we may stumble, we may fall short, but i pledge to you, tha we will act boldly, and deal with our challenges honestly. we will speak truth, and we wil act with the same faith in you that we i ask you to place in u. we believe that our country, al of us, will stand together for better future. we already are, they see it in
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the doctors come at the nurses come at the home healthcare workers and front-line workers whwho are risking their lives t save people they've never met. we see it in the teachers and truck drivers, the factory workers and farmers, the postal workers and poll workers. all putting their own safety on the line to help us get through this pandemic. and we see it in so many of you will, who our working, not just to get us through our current crisis, but to somewhere betterc there is something happening across our country. it's not about joe or me, it's about you. and it is about us, people of all ages, colors, and creeds wh are taking to the streets, and
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also, persuading our family members, rallying our friends, organizing our neighbors, and getting out the vote. we have shown that when we vote we expand access to healthcare and expand access to the ballot box, and ensure that more working families can make a decent living. and i am so inspired by a new generation, you, you are pushin us to realize the ideals of our nation. pushing us to live the values w share.e decency, and fairness, justice, and love. you are patriots, who remind us that to love our country is to fight for the ideals of our
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country. in this election, we have a chance to change the course of history. we are all in this fight. you, me, and joe, together. what an awesome responsibility. what an awesome privilege. so, let's fight with conviction. let's fight with hope. let's fight with confidence in ourselves, and a commitment to each other. to the america we know is possible. the america we love. years from now this moment will have passed, and our children and our grandchildren will look in our eyes, and they are going
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he accepted the nomination of her party, a historic moment we've spoken about that tonight. she is the first woman of color to accept the nomination. atshe talked about her mother, about a family, about what made her who she is, and it was, it is just remarkable to watch thi scene in the room where you wouldul normally see delegates across the floor, and it is a surreal experience.rr i feel for her because it's a difficult position for her to b into stand up there and try to get that in kind of enthusiasm and draw strength from a crowd that isn't there. thank goodness her husband is o stage and they can actually enjoy this moment together. joe and jill biden are out ther too, but they are waving to the crowds, the people at home watching, but just a very different scene from anything we've ever seen. >> surreal as the word and it i historic the first woman of color on a major ticket in the
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u.s., but surreal to see the empty room and also surreal to see joe biden who will accept his party's nomination tomorrow socially distant and kind of bowing to her. whether they have been tested o they could hug it may be just for tonight, i don't know. >> the speech itself hitting some points, obviously very aggressive about donald trump saying at one point, i know a predator when i see one and pausing there. she referenced slightly her tim as a prosecutor the attorney general of california and the san francisco district attorney she said i stood up kamala harris for the people. she seemed to indicate that there might be a vaccine on the horizon, but she went on to say there was no vaccine for racism which was kind of an interestin line. let's start with donna brazil, donna, you have talked about this night for a long time and
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what it means to you. your thoughts onme the speech i the moment, kind of the surreal nature of the moment in covid 1 too. >> it is surreal because of covid 19 because had covid 19 not occurred, i would have been there and i'm, sure i would hav been on the podium giving her a high five and saying love you, love you, love you. there were a lot of people in that room tonight. we didn't see them, but they where they were there. their spirit. the love that they have for justice and equality, the love they have for their country. the women who picked cotton, th women who broke their backs jus trying to get ahead, she spoke to all of them, and many many more. she called out their names. she gave them a part of this moment. she told the stories that have never been told for women who were despised simply because of
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what they looked like. so tonight, there are so many people whoto are crying. so many people who are screaming , so many people are saying now, finally, someone wh looks like me can aspire to the highest office of the land. and yes, someone who dared to g to a black college can now say that i am going to the white house one day. g i was in the room, let the church say, i was in the room. >> that was absolutely lovely and beautiful tribute to the meaning of this night. we all think about this suffrag movement in the 100 years since women got the right to vote, an i think that it does get lost and how odd all of this feels, but good for you for bringing i home in terms of the meaning
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that is there tonight. , you are watching this alongside us here in the studio what are your thoughtsio? >> the line that will be remembered i think as the one that brett mentioned which is n vaccine for racism. we have to do the work.s she was clear in speaking out the the b names of george floyd anr andreonna taylor in what we'v seen in the black live movement and it has changed so much of the political environment in this country today. so remember, a lot of the peopl who were the activists on the street, we're not necessarily t come on the candidacy, when she was running for president, they saw her as the prosecutor from california, they didn't necessarily see her as a kindre spirit, tonight, her words, the way she spoke about family first , about her mother, her dad , her aunts, cousins, nieces,
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godchildren, the way she spoke about her sorority, the way she spoke about historically black t colleges suggested that she now understands and is part of the movement of today. she is buying into the energy, the energy of the democratic party as it comes to the table for this election. when you heard president obama m speaks, again, president obama some folks may think, why didn' he speak more about joe biden. he again was speaking to the idea that people are counting o your cynicism, you're saying what is the point, why go out and vote? both kamala harris and presiden obama spoke to the idea of activism, getting people out, getting people involved and in caring about the electoral process which reinforces the point of the night pretty good
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the washington post reporting that barack obama was supposed to be scheduled as the last speaker of the night in this night three, but he asked to be next to last to symbolically pass the torch to kamala harris. i want you to reflect on both the former president speech and senator harris bared. >> what struck me about this an i think that donna and juan hav taken proper note of this historic moment as only they ca in this time, but i would say this, we heard again tonight that the theme again was you go to get out and vote you got to fight, you have to carry on the fight. it strikes me this party, despite the enviable position which its ticket it appears to be, seems very worried that people are not going to turn ou and vote. there has been so much of a par of the message they are conveying that it makes you sto and wonderer what are you worri about? we will see perhaps.
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>> let's bring in carl, carl, your thoughts on president obama 's speech tonight and kamala harris' speech tonight. it was unique circumstance to g out there and see the states, she definitely gave it her all and it was a tough environment.s >> it's a reminder in the convention speeches, sometimes if you are angry and dislike you're political opponent allots op, sometimes you become tone deaf. no interest he said in finding common ground. he described donald trump as an ,american bird remember when president obama dismissed the suggestion to the house republicans in february of 2009 about a stimulus bill by cuttin them off and saying i won. i also remember when he invited the chairman of the house budge committee to a speech at george washington university and proceeded to decry the republican budget proposals as
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un-american. so tonight to use that language to condemn president trump, but there is a little bit of a background they are the little bit of a back story, and then tonight he said you know, all trump wants to do is enrich themselves and their supporters he's advocating everett ant aun candidate that has a son who's sons have gotten into a little trouble trading on the name of joe biden. at historic moment tonight. i thought it was a pedestrian speech, maybe it was that she had to give it in that empty room, but i thought the video was great, the opening remarks about familymi were terrific, b pretty pedestrian after that. >> we heard former president obama talk about black lives matter, some of that was visibl throughout the presentation tonight about diversity and black lives matter. other parts of it were kind of hidden behind elizabeth warren. we notice the block letters in the school classroom, blm on th
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wall there as you see in the back of her right over her shoulder. blm, black lives matter. that signals, whatever. >> i thought it was a magic moment in kamala harris speech in that was when she said i except your nomination for vice president of the united states of america and they talked abou the historic nature of a her role now all of this ticket. having said that i have to agre with carl, tonight reminded me of nothing so much as b-1 harris ' campaign for president started out with this huge his huge rally, 20,000 people to. before the first vote in iowa. i thought there was a lot of democratic boilerplate, both in the attack on donald trump and the praise of joe biden. i was thinking in the middle of the speech, i don't remember a
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word that tim kaine or mike pentz said when they were nominated for vice president in 2016 and my guess is other than that phrase i accept your nomination, i'm not sure there' a phrase of kamala harris that will be remembered much after chnight. >> as a part of that is because there was no applause, we spent a little bit of today looking a past vice president being nominated and getting that applies. she didn't have that, so i felt for her. i thought it started off a little slow and may be she needed when those awake chocolates with caffeine, she seems reticent to talk about herself but seemed comfortable and animated and excited when she was talking about joe biden. i think if you are the biden team, you are happy with that because she will be somebody in this strange environment, she will probably be a good partner for him. >> that wraps us up for tonight we have taken over a lot of tim from laura ingraham, so we are
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going to wrap up and be back tomorrow. laura ingraham, "the ingraham angle", is up next. >> we will see you tomorrow night. good night. >> i am laura ingraham and this is "the ingraham angle" from washington. day three of the dnc, i was sitting here watching these proceedings and i wondered if this was one of the most dreary visions of america ever presented in a nominating convention. i didn't recognize this america and to deliver the depressing message the party brought out the big stars. in addition to her their vice president we heard from nancy pelosi, hillary clinton, nancy pelosi in the man pulling the levers here behind the closed doors, former president barack obama. he is a man that apparently solved none of these terrible ly issues and problems during his
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eight years in office. tonight were going to bring you can't miss reaction from senior adviser leroy trump, house minority leader, victor davis hanson and a lot more, but first . once again, this is all sizzle no steak at the dnc. they trotted out the parties last global superstar, but that just ended up reinforcing what the entire country already knows . joe biden is no barack obama. obama's almost 60, but he still has swagger, you can see it. one of the most talented politicians of the last 50 years . >> i understand why a lot of americans are down on government . ii understand why a white facto worker who seen his wages cuts or jobs shipped overseas might feel like the government no longer looks out for him and wh a black mom might feel like it never looked out for her at all.
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>> of course they tried this, almost the same line in 2016 with hillary clinton, but they failed miserably. democrats think it joe is in a better place because joe has ha two running mates, kamala and covid. to problems, too radical for most swing voters, and covid is beginning to fade in the red states where people are going back to work in school, playing football. they know this. back to obama, their star tonight. if you think you're getting an obama third term with biden, it's important to take a realit check on what he actually d accomplished. his trade policy encourage more outsourcing of american jobs tw foreign countries he supported the transpacific partnership which is so popular even hilla clinton walked away from it whe she campaigned. biden claims he would change it. obama's healthcare plan was so unpopular it led to his party
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losing the house majority in 2010. rode roughshod over religious and was spanked down by the supreme court for doing it to the little sisters of the poor. the policy made it easier for illegal aliens to come here and get benefits from schooling to food stampsod. this kept wages down for working-class americans as well. obama's foreign policy blunders led to the rise of isis and a china unchecked and unchallenged . and then came 2016. >> the reason i'm here is because of president obama and joe biden, because if they did good job, i wouldn't be here. i enjoyed my previous life very much, but they did such a bad job i stand before you as president. >> he is 100 percent right. we already had eight years of obama and the end result wasn't um american first trump presidency, so the pixie dust
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they were sprinkling tonight wa more like sand in your eye. >> i'm in philadelphia where ou constitution was drafted in signed. it wasn't a perfect document, but embedded in this document was a northstar that would guid future generations. a system of representative government, a democracy, to which we could better realize our highest ideals. >> ignore that historic setting it was beautifully lit and everything, the references to the founders were cute, but we know what's happening here. remember what his most rabid followers were doing to our history, our historical markers for the last few months or so. >> mount rushmore is a national symbol of white supremacy. >> questions have been read about thomas jefferson, but als george, washington,. >> i don't care that much about
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estatues but if you get the theodore roosevelt statue is coming down in new york city. >> people are making a statemen about equality, i think it's a healthy expression. >> and healthy expression, why don't they try to take down tha museum too. we saw tonight the choice is clear, the panelists will get into all of this but if the democrats win, they get the chance to ship more jobs overseas again. if the democrats win, the socia justice warriors, they will get to program the schools, pack th courts, and re- weapon eyes thet department. of third far more radical obama third term but without obama an all the star power and all the celebrity, only the destruction his policies left behind. victor davis hanson, hoover institution senior fellow, he i with those as well.
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molly it's been a long time since barack obama was so disappointed with us. they kind of turned him into another msnbc public analyst gone was hoping change in it wa a very depressing vision of the america that is still the envy of the world today. >> i thought it was interesting what he didn't say, throughout the last few months, you have not heard a lot of democratic leaders condemning the violent riots and protests in cities across the country. sometimes they are even supporting them. the setting he chose i thought was a great opportunity. i thought maybe he would be the only person to really explain why it is wrong to be doing violent riots, to believe that the country is irredeemably evi and must be overthrown. i would hoping he would go ther and if he didn't, he gave a speech that i think is typical of the type of speech he says where he rewrites his own history to be better than he was
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, he had the line saying president trump is condemning the press or something like tha neglecting to mention his administration was brutal towards the press and his bite on and use the department of us justice to go after them. >> was wax poetic about democracy, not to mention that he spied on the trump campaign is in ministration spied on the trunk campaign and did so much to undermine the peaceful transfer of government for the first time in our history. speaking of the idea of the writers, the protesters, victor if obama , tried to wrap this u in a beautiful historical narrative that only vdh can comment on watch. >> to the young people who lead us this summer, telling us we need to be better, in so many ways you are this country's dreams fulfilled. you can give our democracy meaning. you can take it to a better
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place. >> victor, you can burn churche down and deface historical markers andd set buildings on fire and level them in three nights of work. unbelievable. just like ripping down statues that are not your property. >> is, the inner cities in minneapolis, seattle, portland, new york are a waste signed. we in portland we saw them destroying the whole shopping million-dollar mile and corridor . the democrats are mentally, ideologically or incapable of criticizing blm, 700 policemen injured commit $10 billion of destruction many people killed because they find it i guess useful to create a sense of anarchy, also incapable of offering a positive agenda.
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here in california, the 109 today, and we've had these rolling blackouts that are voluntarily returning 4,000 megawatts to have are new green deal here in california. is that with the rest of the country wanted, are they going to stop the wall, continue the walk? there is nothing positive as an alternative agenda. within they talk about the constitution, but my gosh, laura , they are trying to destroy the electoral college. they have 550 sanctuary cities. in addition they have beto who is talking about buying back guns that you never owned. so endangering the second amendment, so very anti- constitutional. finally when they saw covid covid, eight, covid prayed we borrowed four billion dollars this year. are we doing better or worse than the uk, belgium, spain,
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italy about the same to the degree were not doing better. >> i have to get kimberly in here. the population has about 40 percent of that gein the art. >> so they continued to fear mongering with covid tonight ignoring the fact that the numbers in arizona, texas, florida, are going down. we are hearing community and some. red states are opening. so kimberly, when she talked, kamala harris talked about education and the need to have kids in schools, and the idea, what? red state governors want to ope their schools, the blue state governors are keeping the schools shut no matter what the covid record as spread. >> there were too notable moments, one was when barack obama mentioned because up unti now democrats have always wante to make the comparison to a bol which is apples and oranges. h1n1 is better because they are
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records on that was absolutely disastrous. especially in terms of making and rolling out a vaccine. there is some real ground to cover in that for some enterprising journalism. talking about the need to educate all these other candidates ceding in empty classrooms as if this is someho donald trump's fault. it is the blue state governors that aren't acknowledging the need to get kids back its teachers unions refusing to go back or suing or threatening sick outs, it is this dates out there that are trying to actually make this work and recognizing they needs to balance the economy and education along with dealing with the viruswi that are the o that are moving the country forward and this is the approac the white house has been pushin two. >> finally, we have elizabeth warren in a classroom in the background it says blm spelled out, it's like what can you fin
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in the room game. and a lot of people online were saying this is foreshadowing. i note there f this is foreshadowing the 1619 project coming into public schools with that little elizabeth warren three letter spell out in the background, that was purposely done, obviously. >> that, and i've been finding it interesting that democrats are talking about schools in an sense. teachers unions are very much a part of the coalition but the teachers unions are at odds wit the e children and their famili when it comes to reopening schools or whether children should be banned from schools. also they are the means by whic a lot of the progressive ideology gets filtered into the classroom and it is something that the country is irredeemabl evil as opposed to i liked what president obama said at the beginning of his speech and i wish he would've carried it through to talking about why this desire to overthrow our system is so wrong. >> great to see you tonight,
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thank you so much for sticking around. speaking of barack obama. he played up his romance with biden tonight. let's not forget obama's refusa to endorse biden in the first place. that isn't nearly as humiliatin as all the nasty and insulting comments he has made about joe. in a first press conference in 2009, the young president quipped, i don't remember what joe was referring to, not surprisingly. in his 2014 book, new york time while obama had come to like biden, he often talked about hi with a patronizing overabundanc as if the vp were the beloved family dog that kept on the carpet and politico reported on recalled the former president warning president warning don't underestimate joe's ability to mess things up. how hollow of an endorsement is
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this? here with reaction to the trump campaign, senior advisor where trump. how concerned as the drum camp that obama will draw president trump into a fight making it obama against trump versus instead of trump versus biden. >> he hasn't been very forthcoming to do much fervor joe biden so that remains to be seen. we know he talked amount of that , so as you pointed out, he told joe biden i'm not going to endorse you until you are the last guy standing. is so look, we are not too concerned about that. we all have to remember that at the top of the ticket at the en of the day it is still joe bide and you wonder why we've had to basically a two hour infomercia where you never see the product that they're selling.
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is auy product nobody wants to y , but you don't hear much about joe in many of the things people are saying. what is he going to do for the country and how is he going to help americans the reality is heat they know he can't. the only way forward is donald trump and he is the one that will get us back up and running. nobody wants to buy what the democrats our selling, so we're not too worried about former president obama. >> i think what's obvious to me at least as that their covid policy, they kept saying joe wa going to get it under control, joe was going to beat the pandemic, but what they're not going to say as joe is going to lock you down. if they think governor witmer these blue state governors have the answers, all the activists are pushing everything to close schools to close, no football, no fun, no meetings, no charge, that is their only play, and wear goggles and a mask and do
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zoom calls , that's it, that's the plan, but they don't want t say that because suburbans moms don't want to have their kids locked in with them doing zoom calls, they just don't want that . to get you can keep the liquor stores open, but don't about it liquor stores he would've done a good job because we all remember while the democrats were playing politics the same date nancy pelosi was handing out or impeachment bends, donald trump stopped travel coming to the country from china to prevent the spread from happening too quickly. what did joe biden do? he called it fear mongering and xena phobic. the idea that he had any solution for that. nancy pelosi was telling people to come down to chinatown. these people are crazy if they think they would've done anything better than this president. the task force led by mike pent did an amazing job not a single person in this country went without a ventilator that neede
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them, but they are still bankin on coronavirus it will be amazing how it will disappear o november 4th for these people. >> speaking of hollow endorsement, pelosi took the center stage two complete her transformation into just a radical indie trump zealots, bu before she did commit they introduced her with this add too . >> i'm the mother of five and grandmother of nine. the power of the speaker is awesome. awesome. you also have to be prepared to throw a punch. from running the house to speaker of the house, and takin on the white house unapologetic unafraid.
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>> go nancy. joining me now is house minorit leader kevin mccarthy who can't beat her in a battle of wits. i that's ridiculous. that video is over-the-top. look, the democrats put on a good show, and they use personality because theyey didn want to talk policy going back to the national lockdown that they're going to impose . there is no doubt about it, tha is their only strategy. what do you think tonight after watching that? >> name me one thing, one problem that the democrats have solved since they took the majority? the power of the speaker. she spent her entire majority drumming up and impeachment tha field as well in she doesn't even mention that. they have no message so all the do is mislead. when you watch tonight, they be people to vote, but they don't inspire somebody devote with an agenda about tomorrow being better than today.
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kamala harris said we will solv covid. if joe biden was president today , we would still debate whether the planes from china should come to america because we know hunterr biden would be getting quite a bit of money from them. >> congressman, a lot of republicans >>our messaging me the last 24 hours watching this virtual thing. people don't really want to watch virtual conventions. it keeps people's attention ande not expect some of these myths about how trump handled covid and the economy, all the rest. >> we are going to do it in man different ways, we're going to show average americans talking about it because we have an agenda we can run on. we can talk about renewing the american dream. we can talk about restoring it
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efte at night. you know how we will defeat it we will have the therapeutics coming out even next month hopefully. vaccines like we've never seen before.e and then we will talk about rebuilding the economy bigger than ever before. wednesday when harris talks about raising all the boats to the economy for everybody, we have a record of doing it. it didn't matter what gender what color of skin or others. we are showing the difference instead of looking at what the green new deal, looking at what they want to do to defund the police. president obama thinks that tha is the future. >> they have an interesting way of trying to sell their candidates. they get all these also-ran so-called republicans or strategists he ran failed
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campaigns for republicans and put them on cnn. congressman charlie gent endorsed obama and said this. watch quickly. >> is it possible that the republican party party is now the party of arranged bigots? and there isn't a place in it any longer for charlie dent. >> i have a lot of friends in congress on the republicanan si and i know there as frustrated as i am. y ey're not in a position to sa it is i can, but they are frustrated and they know this i very difficult and there in a bad situation is a party. >> deranged bigots, that is wha he threw out there about the republican party tonight. >> so they hire a former republican on cnn and then are shocked by that. what about a democrat that gets elected to congress, but leaves the party to join the republica party. that happened this year, that i much more telling than as we're a loser loser who ran for
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president. i think that tells more about who believes in the philosophy. congressman, thanks so much. for analysis of the d&c 93, som of the meetings on the edge of the convention were joined by ray arroyo. you noticed a theme that ran through everything paired. >> they smartly program this evening, they told their speakers there was a theme, america is finished it's a dystopian nightmare out there and then they proved it. >> businesses around the countr are bearing the economic front of the coronavirus pandemic. >> a lot of people are clearly in pain right now. for every farm there is a fight to stay whole. >> there is hard work and heartbreak. we are going to lose 20 dest 30
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percent of our small businesses. >> what they didn't tell you in due mentioned it earlier, these were mostly blue states were never catch-up down these economy so of course it looks bad. this looks like the outtakes from the hunger games a dark dystopian vision, this is why the ratings are so low for this entire extravaganza. people don't want this doom and gloom. tonight we saw kamala harris during her speech invoked patriotism and said to love our country is to fight for the ideals of this country. i watched a couple of the d&c caucus meetings are the last fe days and this was the start of the i pledge allegiance to the flag of the united states of america and to the republic for which it stands one nation indivisible with liberty and
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justice for all. >> i think they left something out there, but surely the musli caucus event wouldn't exclude under god from the pledge? >> i pledge allegiance to the flag of the unites states of america and to the republic for which it stands one nation indivisible with liberty and justice for all. >> i don't know how they decide this is going to win over peopl of faith, we saw these plays where people of faith today, tomorrow we will bring you more of their interfaith council. people of faith and evangelical and catholics run when they hea this kind of thing? >> it's one of these things tha big speech events.
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you have to take what your kids are going to talk, with what th justice department is going to do. their credentials in their viewpoint, everybody's going to come together and kumbaya along the constitution museum. >> beyond the happy talker, beyond the flag wagging and joe biden makes phone calls to people he meets on amtrak, but you're left with this, what are the activist in the party, the people driving momentum and collecting voters, what did the believe? we will bring you more of it in the days ahead. >> we appreciate it. pastor darrell scott as standin by with fiery responses from both to kamala harris acceptanc speech, stay tuned. as you get older,
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>> laura: kamala harris >> kamala harris acceptance speech about as electric as the state of california right now. focus groups going to be tested out and you would expect that including this one. >> this virus, it has no eyes, and yet, it knows. exactly how we see each other. so that be clear, there is no vaccine for racism. >> if you want to blame the from covid on, l eve got it,. the filmmaker will be released on demand. also with me is the cochair of black voices for trump advisory board. this was the animating theme of her acceptance speech, now tell
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me that more democrats out ther are getting a little more creative than this. i found this very depressing tonight overall. >> i think in some ways i didn' even do justice to kamala harri because it was in empty vacuous account of how she came to be who she is. their was a lot of invocation o family, but it actually contradicted all of the things that kamala had said earlier in her career she said she was influenced, she was raised on the indian side of her family when her parents divorced and she said the most influential people that shaped her life wer her grandfather a kind of india socialist, and i know something about this because i grew up in india under socialism.nd we had a rash and cart, so socialism basically deprived a whole bd so this so she is alwa jolly she got from her grandfather not one mention of
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that at all and then her mother had a big influence on her, but kind of a cynical one. again, relatively unmentioned.t but she was the one that makes comments about the rising to power by winking herself to influential men commit and this i think is again something that i think she didn't want to highlight at all it contradicts the whole need to narrative. all w of this was carefully omitted from the kindd of morality tale that we got tonight. >> again, racism, it seemed lik the running mateik of joe biden the virus was the running mate and kamala was the running mate but you're overall take on the appeal to black voters through this message. >> we'll come at you know, the play-by-play, i will give the color commentary that was the most dull boring uninspiring acceptance speech i have ever heard in my life.
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she sounded like a kid in the sixth grade reading a book report in front of the class. any black voters that were undecided before that speech they have decided now, they've decided not to vote for kamala harris prayed that was horrible. it was all i could do to keep from falling asleep while it wa going on. for her to be at this pivotal moment and here she is, woman raking whatever this glass ceiling or whatever it is, this is all she brought, who wrote this and who prepared this? she should be ashamed of herself . whoever is being truthful with her needs to tell her i'm sorry but your speech sucked tonight. maybe you can redeem yourself, but for tonight, it was horrible . >> sarah'm palin speech in 2008 actually laid out the vision fo mccain and palin in what they wanted to do for the country. she was trashed by nicole wallace and all of these people who didn't like the vision i
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guess or didn't like her. but it was a better speech than this. this was just a walk down memor lane. the same old stuff we've heard on any given night on any of th other cables, so how does that make her different?di i think she was poorly served and i think the pastor is absolutely correct there. >> of the problem for kamala harris is her record as a prosecutor is very infuriating om the progressive left, so tha is nothing she could have highlighted because it would have boomerang down her. so then we come to all that she really has left which is the identity politics narrative, th first black women narrative int make that work she has to be genuine victim and has to be someone that was done wrong by society. in reality, her life has been one of almost unadulterated privilege, privilege and every sector of american life, lifted up by to successful professiona parents and with the background
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behind them. the narrative doesn't work and that's why as a candidate kamal doesn't work. >> in six hours of primetime programming, the black lives matter group has been mentioned abouton six times, but in the panels that populate the daytime , hosted by all those activist we've mentioned, it wa mentioned many time in a single sentence. pastor scott, in about 20 seconds why the disconnect between daytime and primetime pair to get the disconnect as because the audience they are trying to reach and the message they are trying to present and it just shows right there that they are not even united in wha they are representing initiatives. this is as well with the conditions that are currently gripping the country. their lack of mention as disgusting and disturbing. americans want leadership, waamericans want inspiration, t don't want just information the want inspiration and.
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>> gentleman, great to have bot of you on tonight. we enjoyed the conversation and we will see you soon. up next, we will bring you shannon bream and the fox news at night team, they take it all from here. >> shannon: all right, laura, some thought-provoking conversation there, we will pick up where you left off, thank you very shannon: thought-provoking conversation. we will pick up where you left off and we begin with a fox news alert. after three nights of the democratic national convention what is clear is the party is making a fervent appeal to progressives visually and ritually while trying to keep the platform closer to the center by watering down things like climate change plans. television ratings have plummeted on broadcast but the dnc is streaming caucus meetings with speakers making contentious statements associated with the hard left.
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