tv FOX News Primetime FOX News February 10, 2021 4:00pm-5:01pm PST
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before -- >> bret: a congressman from texas, one of the house impeachment managers making the case over former president donald trump donald trump. it's lawyers will have their time either late tomorrow or friday. thanks for inviting us into your home today, fair, balanced, still unafraid. fox news prime time starts right now. >> mark: i was hoping you would put an animal face on for the alto. thanks a lot, great show as always. this is fox news prime time. it looks as if the house impeachment managers will be going late tonight, and getting take on the way home. if anything of consequences said we will bring it to you. don't hold your breath. if you are a defendant county court, these sneakers with their hollywood produced videos might have you on the ropes. then again, at your county
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court, these hollywood produced videos would not be admissible as evidence. even with the court ordered public defender representing yourself with no counsel whatsoever, you couldn't do a worse job them trumps attorneys did yesterday. 24 hours ago i was suggesting to the lead trompe l'oeil or name i cannot recall i choose not to -- the guy who is usually staggering around recalling his parents playing him albums of senate speeches in his boyhood. he might as well have brought on whoopi goldberg to rectify her defenses. a couple of hours later, our own shannon bream broke the news that the accused mr. trump was furious with his legal team as he should be. thankfully for him, he was down my stomach they were nowhere to be seen today. instead among the prosecutors, congressman eric swalwell a man penetrated by chinese
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intelligence in the comely shape of things. this is no obstacle to being the prosecutor charged with trying to get chairman more dominic sworn enemy removed from the ballot in 2024. he was pained to distinguish between the incites are in chief and any of you guys who made the mistake of voting for him. >> when we talk about the violent mob during the attack, we do not mean every american who showed up at president trumps rally. a certain americans came to protest peacefully, as is their right. >> mark: got that? some of you rubes are okay, the rest are simply innocent boneheads and inflamed by trump. you are too stupid to figure out the election is on the up and up, you should just settle back and enjoy the mostly peaceful peaceful transfer of power. they advanced to boulder
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arguments. you're such a jump that you think because trump is the commander-in-chief you are obligated to obey the commands of your commander. andy mccarthy clarified that earlier today in the tea break. speak of the president is not the commander in chief of the country. he is the commander in chief of the armed forces of the united states. as for the rest of us, he works for us. he doesn't give us commands. they are trying to create that impression. >> mark: civics classes are so dumbed down people don't understand that tom can order a drone to take out nicest guy, but he can't order you to take out a senate window. if the democrats figure it's working for them, and may turn the impressionable squishes on the g.o.p. side their way. joining me now, shannon bream, chief legal correspondent and host of fox news at night, but you should be watching tonight, shannon, great to see you.
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don't with analyst hat on -- you covered all of these big important supreme court cases. it must be kind of slightly weird to have to pretend that this is like a regular judicial proceeding when in fact, if it were happening in the district courthouse, it would be lack dominic left off stage procedurally. >> shannon: you are so right mark, in that this is not technically a legal proceeding. it's very much more political in nature. this is a jury that doesn't know who the parties are, they don't love you pat -- they lived through the facts of the case. this is going to be a different presentation when it comes to evidence and witnesses that they vote to have those. one of the jurors essentially presiding over the thing based on his seniority, he's been very clear in setting out the path. if there is dispute, i will consult with the parliamentarian about this. it's not like any regular trial
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where if you and i got in trouble -- me, not you. if we showed up in court, we would have a very different situation on our hands. there's a lot of emotion, but procedurally and in standards of evidence, it's completely different. >> mark: the one thing that strikes me as different, because there's a lot of differences between the u.s. system and hear with canadian court or english court. up there, the judges basically do their own objections. if you're in an american courthouse, every 2 minutes the other guy's attorney is jumping up and saying, objection, your honor -- relevance. here, the guys get to basically do these one hour, to our presentations with no interruption when on relevance grounds and all kinds of other grounds, any attorney worth his salt would be interrupting all the time. >> shannon: you might get one of those, i strenuously object -- if you remember that from a few good men.
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you will not get that character, none of that is going to happen here. it is for each of these presentations that go on on both sides. it's been very emotional with the video and the splicing together of moments. a lot of video that people hadn't seen before, including these members seem videos of themselves in some cases being hustled around by police officers and those who are trying to protect them. you have to remember, you can't win a case here on emotion. or they don't think the democrats in their wildest expectations that they're going to persuade a 17 republican senators. you have to ask yourself, what is the actual ultimate goal of this proceeding? because if you don't think you're going to get to conviction, you will not get to the next step of buying resident trump from running to office again. what is it about? some will say listen, this will drive a wedge even further in the g.o.p. party. people have to decide if there would be trump wayne, if they
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want to move past trump. there is lots of others saying this is going to coalesce them and bring them together in some ways. when you have the suggestion that millions, potentially tens of millions of trump voters were somehow okay with this behavior and the criminal things actually happened at the capitol, i think you're going to make president trump even more of an empathetic figure to some of those people who will feel like he is being attacked, and that by proxy, their vote is being attacked. i think that's why the part you played from congressman eric swalwell was important for the democrats to say. we don't think we are all bad guys, we want to go after the bad guys. they risk communicating that to the millions of people who feel they are lumped in. >> mark: let me ask you this quickly. incitement is a criminal offense in the country, but it has to be imminent incitement. bringing up speeches from march, april, may, even late october doesn't actually qualify as
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incitement under that standard, does it? >> shannon: again we are talking about some thing that is not a true legal proceeding. getting to the elements of the crime is not going to happen here. at the democrats have to be careful because when they open those doors it also opens the door to the president's legal team which is clearly going to say, here's video of people goig to republicans houses, running them out of restaurants, those kinds of things are likely to be seen later this week. >> mark: we will check in with you in whatever it is -- four hours time, shannon. fox news at night -- we will be watching. thank you. also here tonight, things a lot shannon. john hendrick a, president of the center of american experiment. john, you were right here a couple of weeks ago about the difficulty the president has finding good lawyers. i'll say it straight up. that was the worst opening statement i have ever heard yesterday. i will tell you, i would've
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fired that guy in the corridor 10 minutes afterwards. what did you make of it? >> there's two things going on here, mark beard at the first is that donald trump does have bad taste in lawyers. we saw michael cohen, we saw a rudy giuliani way past his prime, we saw sydney pollack, that's not the real story. at the real story is that majorw firms and high profile lawyers don't dare represent donald trump. we have seen this over and over again. he has hired a top-notch law firms like jones day from the biggest in the united states, and they wind up having to put out a public statement saying, we don't represent donald trump. part are right for them, one firm after another. my good friend lena mitchell is a senior partner, big global law firm, very respected, top lawyer. she did a tiny bit of volunteer advice to donald trump after the election that became public. at the last launch -- they
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launched a massive attack on the law firm and the law firm's client. if they were trying to put her out of business. she felt she had no choice for the sake of her partners but to leave the law firm. in michigan, we've got the governor trying to get the lawyers who represented trump in that state disbarred. if there is not a major law firn america that would dare to represent donald trump. >> mark: given that, john, my friend and comrade always says, america has more lawyers than the rest of the planet combined, which is apparently statistically true. do you know this, if you've got some -- just some guy working out of a one-room office in some small town, and he's representing you in divorce court or in traffic court or whatever -- you to be furious if he did what that guy did
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yesterday when he's staggering around reminiscing about how everybody in america loves senators. he had a long-playing album of senatorial speeches -- what the was going through, that was his opportunity to lay out a principled case. >> [laughs] i cannot explain it. i think the two or three lawyers who are now representing trump in this proceeding have been on the case for a week or less. i think there were some other lawyers that just came on. it's in shambles. to be fair, the brief they wrote was not bad. i thought the brief was perfectly adequate. one of the ironies, that lawyer you can say what you said -- that lawyers going to win this case. a month from now, he will say, i won the biggest case of my life rather easily. >> mark: they will be teaching that opening statement in law school in ten years' time. that's an interesting theory.
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just -- the real peril here is if they can find 17 republican senators to turn. it is that with -- remotely within the realm of possibility? >> no. at this is an exercise in futility. 45 senators have already voted that they don't think they have jurisdiction. this is over before it began. the amazing thing to me, what i think it's a really significant thing, is that the democratic party is obsessed and not with the new administration coming in, not with talking about the things they want to do for the american people, that's the last thing they want to be focused on. joe biden, they are obsessed continuing to hate donald trump as they've been doing for the last four years. i find that just astonishing. >> mark: you've got a point there, john. thank you for that analysis. a great for that lawyer will be able to uproot his hourly rate.
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what a horrible thought. meanwhile, in the real world, the balance in a california city. at this real life, not going on in the senate. the violence in one california city is now so out of control that citizens are banding together to patrol their own streets. they can no longer rely on their troubled police force. that is coming up next. ♪ ♪ ood sugar. a majority of adults who took ozempic® reached an a1c under 7 and maintained it. here's your a1c. oh! my a1c is under 7! (announcer) and you may lose weight. adults who took ozempic® lost on average up to 12 pounds. i lost almost 12 pounds! oh! (announcer) for those also with known heart disease, ozempic® lowers the risk of major cardiovascular events such as heart attack, stroke, or death. it lowers the risk. oh!
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random attacks and robberies. things have gotten so bad that people have started citizen patrols to keep their neighbors safe. will this kind of vigilante law enforcement save lives or lead to more violence? joining me now is radio host from seattle, jason rantz. jason, basically there are places where you have one day of action, january the 6th, and the world has to stop while we address that, find out who did it. of these other places where violence can just go one day after day, night after night, fr months on end, and it's just a normal feature of life out on the west coast, particularly. >> yeah, and it's a solid reality for all these people who have to deal with it. a citizen should not have to create their own patrols be it in oakland or anywhere else. they should have a fully resource police department to do
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the work for them. this is not safe. on the one hand, i do appreciate people going out into the community. with more people who are visible who show up and say they care, the better it is, but these are not folks were trained, these are people who do know how to de-escalate, which is what the activist community has been demanding. unfortunately, it could end poorly for these individuals who are well-intentioned. what we need to stop doing is embracing this culture that has been attacking police and policing. when you look specifically at what's going on in the city of oakland, that's exactly what's happened. you had a motor last month, every other day in the city of oakland. what's happened at the exact same time? you had a city that's embraced at the defund the police movement. what have they done? they cut the bicycle and foot patrols, they cut the community resource team that patrolled the neighborhood. kind of weird. >> mark: it is weird.
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shannon bream and i were talking a couple minutes ago about incitement. one of the things that's happening -- some of these groups are now inciting the mob against you in particular. >> we had a few folks go into the mob when they're all on the streets we go in because it's actually important to tell people what's going on. we know that a lot of media outlets are not going to do that. we know that there are media outlets like the competition that pretends it doesn't actually exist. they are the arm of the democratic party. it does exist, it is happening. people online notice that when we're there we take photos and videos and they screenshot our faces and tell people our names. they start have tagging codes to the mobs on the ground saying, jason rantz is out there, he's out there taking photos of your faces -- be on the lookout.
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i was there a couple weeks ago in the city of tacoma, washington, as part of their riots. i heard my name being discussed, i think was undercover in a sense that we are in the middle of a pandemic, i can cover my face, i had a beanie on. they do that with the intent to harass, intimidate, and yes, i've seen folks who are trying to uncover this sort of thing getting assaulted. >> mark: do you feel it's a little bit odd when you have congressman sobbing on the floor of the house of representatives because they were three blocks away on january the 6th, but they feel that somehow suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder with guys like you on american cities are being targeted, they're just supposed to suck it up, basically. >> here's the issue, they want to pretend because they could --
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nothing else is going on, this is just about them. there's no doubt that what happened on january 6 was serious, and it is a stain on our history, however, there was also eight months of violence that has overtaken american cities. people were murdered, businesses were destroyed, lives were ruined, and that also matters. we have to pay attention to that. to this day, not only is that being ignored, we still have members of congress like cori bush were egging it on. that has to be seen as a potential's atomic threat. >> mark: you're absolutely right. it all seems to have to do oddly enough with which mob you happen to line up with. there mob is scared of every different deal than the other guys mobs. thank you for that, jason, always good to hear from you. to stay safe on the mean streets of democratic cities. coming up next, why is a cnn
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host overstating what happened on the aforementioned january the 6th? anderson cooper is now comparing that day to the in rwanda when almost 1 million people were murdered back in 1994. if that's coming straight ahead. i'm ♪ ♪ it's my livelihood. ♪ rock music ♪ >> man: so i'm not taking any chances when something happens to it. so when my windshield cracked... my friend recommended safelite autoglass. they came right to me, with expert service where i needed it. ♪ rock music ♪ >> man: that's service i can trust... no matter what i'm hauling. right, girl? >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ carl shopped for the lowest mortgage rate and chose amerisave, a choice he'll never regret... ...unlike the choice to hitch hike. ahhh! which ruined his hand modeling career... it's over. don't worry, carl. things are looking up. visit amerisave.com now. lower mortgage rates mean higher savings.
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after using xiidra, wait 15 minutes before reinserting contacts. got any room in your eye? talk to an eye doctor about twice-daily xiidra. i prefer you didn't! xiidra. not today, dry eye. ♪ ♪ >> mark: in january 6 was only a month ago. it's a heads atomic significance expands hourly. it started off as an insurrection, a coup, at the beginning this week it was the -- >> i think he is cursed by republican party that is chasing a madman who actually encouraged people to attacker capitol. >> mark: why don't you have the guts to tell the truth, it's
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not a mere sacking of a capitol, if they rwanda on the potomac. >> the idalia of -- we've seen a lot over the last decade. it's easy to otherrize, other than human. we seen in bosnia, in rwanda where are telling people telling radio listeners that they are cockroaches, getting them ginned up for. it see them in those videos. it's been on a couple of points, first, if you know of any overheated historical analogies, take them to cnn because they are running out. second, other-icing, if the official policy of the american left. that's why "new york times" writers are agonizing for
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powering fruitfully the snow from their drivers. half the country has been otherrize into a homogenous block of racist, white supremacist while the other half is categorized into boutique identity groups to such extent that the new regime advertises its daily as the first holy mutually otherrize administration. those new other identities multiply. fashionable old identities get lumped in with insurrectionist flow powers. the san francisco school board tonight spent two hours talking about whether or not to let a gate out of mixed race kids to volunteer for one of several empty seats on apparent advisory group. he doesn't bring diversity to the group the guys got the orientation all
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point, and he's aced the mixed-race kids points, but it turns out he's just another white bloke like that guy with the viking horns at the u.s. capitol. by the way, this is an all-female body that is apparently okay with otherrize ing. they are still talking about how to safely reopen schools. nothing new there. the good news is that san francisco now registers fewer schoolchildren than it does dogs. they are successfully otherrizing parents. here's my main beef with this shtick from steve bannon. to cnn. flat out refused at the time to compare the rwandan to. in 1994 when madeline albright was asked about it, she said ,"
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this becomes a legal definitional thing, unfortunately in terms of as horrendous as all these things are, there becomes a definitional question. oh." indeed. if it was they would've done something about it. as bill clinton told the world, the united nations us to learn to say no. the bleeding heart virtue signaling left didn't start calling it a until everyone was dead. if that's left is compassion in a nutshell. we will be sorry for you after the machete is being stuck in your chest, don't worry, we will dust off your dismembered corpse as an all-purpose analogy for the victims of the tea party or to sell my developer on queens. some four dozen other countries our own member of the
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commonwealth, the successor entity to the british empire. rwanda was never a british colony. it was a belgian colony. after being screwed over by bill clinton, madeleine albright, the u.n., the belgians, and the french, rwanda applied to join the british commonwealth and made english the primary language of its education system, which i'm not sure one could reliably say of many american school districts. it turns out whether -- the rwandans are less hung up about the malign legacy of anglo imperialists, colonialists, whatever than the leftist twits at to running the average school board and otherrizing themselves into oblivion. coming up, from plato and aristotle to the rigors of great drama greek and latin. why a "new york times" piece suggest the study or teaching of the classics is racist. i beg your pardon, i was
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galloping too far ahead. we have with us -- he's going to talk about domestic terrorism. he and i have had the good fortune to spend some time in a country with a domestic terrorist movement. of that long tangled irish history is basically that my side was trying to kill him. if we let that go in the interest of collegiality. you actually got -- you know the irish republican army and it's hard men in some detail because he spent years covering that situation. are you slightly stunned at the idea that the domestic terrorist movement can actually be conjured out of whole cloth when there's no evidence. >> it is stunning, actually. the ira -- they assassinated
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governor ministries. they -- that is domestic terrorism. >> they assassinated a member of the royal family. they had quite a -- they built up and impressive resume. as we back then, the people arguing against the over terrorizing of people where the left. if they were saying, this is not terrorism. this is merely political opinions. they argued against the setting up of a security state and setting up a permanent antiterrorism infrastructure. at the left were the ones morning saying, this will come back to bite you. now over one days rioting they are arguing. i saw in the usa today newspaper for a 20 year were on domestic
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terrorism because of a single riot on a single day. >> mark: they are planning for this to go on even -- i mean, the old war on terror was fun for a while, but it's basically all over seas. you can make people shuffle like a great bovine herd she was through the airports for the rest of their lives, but it doesn't afford as much opportunity to control them as a fully blown domestic terror movement, even if we have to invent one. >> exactly. that's what the left use to warn us about, that the security would be coming for you. this was an excuse. the inflation -- terrorism inflation will be used to come after you. now, there is the ones with the terrorism inflation, i mean, in fact the only aspect of this whole last year that's reminded me of northern ireland what route p riots during the summer.
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that was very much like a summer in belfast. domestic terrorism is very real, a very real thing. just like the supreme court judge, you know when you see it. this was not domestic terrorism. the one do you think we risk actually getting eight domestic terrorism -- if you start creating a fictional one for yor domestic policy needs, do you think we could actually wind up with one just because everyone's talking about it all the time? >> when you eventually -- this is about suppressing political opinion, not about dust and when you suppress political opinion, has to come out somewhere. when i was growing up, there was a song that all of the bars among all the left, you dared to call me a terrorist. this is what the left got excited about. the british labor party invited
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members of the ira into the house of commons were receptions saying, these are not terrorists. but their friends downstairs were flaunting the car bombs. >> mark: tea and cakes in the house of commons. thank you for that. phelan has a fabulous play constructed entirely from the fbi text of peter strzok and lisa page bid if hollywood wasn't full of idiots, warner bros. or paramount would be making that into a blockbuster movie to get us through the next three years locked out. thank you very much, terrific to see you. as i was in just a few minutes ago, plato and aristotle -- the rigors of greek and latin. "the new york times" piece says all of that stuff, the classics, is racist. we found a bona fide bona fide classicist, he's going to respond to that up next on fox news prime time. ♪ ♪ ne of them. cvs simpledose presorts your prescriptions into packets,
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radical progressives are hopping in their time machines and tyint greece. at "the new york times" highlighting a princeton classicist who is hell-bent on destroying his field from within. within. "systemic racism is foundational to those institutions that incubate classics and classics as a field itself. maybe that's where i got it from. i did latin from the age of the southern end greek from the age of 11, and i can still remember a lot of it. the faithful is in the river. davis hanson, the one and only, he's got a new book coming later, the dying citizen. it's great to see you, victor. what do you make of this? >> i was really confused because the greeks don't really have a word for the idea of whiteness.
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they never end to identified themselves as white. they seem to -- race seems to almost be irrelevant when they bring black warriors to troy he is called the blameless even though he's the son of a god. in roman literature, terrence was probably black. it's not relevant to the greeks. if they don't look at the world that way. more importantly -- >> mark: that's actually a vital point. that's actually a vital point. >> roman civilization is so unique and it's so critical. it makes a model and it tears it apart. that's why western civilization today is so critical, self reflective in a way that may be islamic culture or chinese traditions are not. when you look at the ancient world, take the first product of the ancient world. here's all of these guys fighting, and you think of patriarchy or our male
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superiority. here's penelope back at his ago that i outsmart all of the elite establishment of the island for ten years, or the noble who's got the most ethical moral bearings and anybody in the odyssey. it's always trying to re-examine a weather it's -- this is the way most people believe. is it correct? let's tear it apart. that's what makes it so unique. i don't understand at all what the classics are like in the elite schools because, that's not classics. that's parlor lounge group of fighting back and forth, race, set down my class, gender. it's k-12 cheat stomach teachers we don't give any credit. they are trying to teach latin. i talked for 20 years, mostly minority, and the idea was, how could we give them the competitive education and glamour of literature, language, architecture, archaeology, so they could get the same chance that you could get at stanford
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or berkeley or harvard. the irony was, over 21 years we gave them a better education than what they were giving, getting in the ivy league's. >> mark: the reason we know the names of roman athens, as he said, is because they critique their own society. the other interesting point, sometimes it's hard to figure out who is white and to to who is black, but they didn't apparently think in terms of skin pigmentation, would you think would make them admirable as models for us. >> years ago a brilliant african-american classicist, frank snowden, with wrote a book called blacks integrating. he showed through the archaeological, the visual, the philological evidence -- there wasn't a sense of whitene wtenes versus blackness. they were dark matter to mediterranean peoples likely.
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they weren't aware of it, they weren't prejudicial in a racial sense at all. with the take away of classics is, it teaches you a method. you look at different examples, you empirically investigate them, you make a diagnosis, then you make a prognosis, and you don't come up with the deductive ideas. the problem is the anti-classicist in the university who says, i have this preconception, and i'm going to find and cherry pick evidence to make it true. that's deduction and that's anti-western. i think that's what is lost. if you have a background in classics, you know why we had this type of system and the government. you know what the supreme court looks like it does. do you know what a column is. you know what the difference between an epic and another poem. you get an artistic appreciation for things that you otherwise didn't even notice before.
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it's a democratizing experience. i grew up on a farm where i am speaking today, and i didn't know what latin or greek wasn't until 18. i went to uc see santa cruz, had to brilliant classics professors. if they changed my entire life. they said, you know what? it doesn't matter where you are from, it doesn't matter if you have latin, this is a democratizing experience. welcome to the western world. welcome to the restaurant world. a lot of students lives were changed with that opportunity. >> mark: that's a way to say, welcome to the western world. that's why remember athens and other towns around the planet. we are right to do that. speaking of school, so much for getting kids back in them full-time. at the biotin now says that one day a week in the classroom is good enough. at that must be all that rigorous science that the biotin administration follows. we are coming up with that in
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>> mark: parents across the country are frustrated beyond belief their children's schools are still closed to in-person learning but don't worry. the biden administration has a plan to get kids and teachers back in the classroom. well, sort of. >> why didn't he ever mention in small print it would be just for one day a week as a goal? >> well, again, the president made, set a goal to reopen majority of schools within a 100 days. when you asked what that meant, i answered the question. so that is not the ceiling. that is the bar we are trying to leap over. >> mark: yea. you don't need to leap over that bar. that is limbo dancing. that is the expression she
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wants. kat timpf host of "sincerely kat" on fox nation which a fabulous show and worth the cost of the subscription alone. the teachers union will be the last people on the planet to go back to work. >> yeah. even some of them are saying if i have a vaccine it's not safe to go back. what do you want? what do you mean by reopening schools and not having it made more public. because nobody when they hear "reopen the schools" thinks that it would potentially even mean one day a week. and at least a little over half. going to school one day a week does not mean in-person learning anymore that going on one date one date a week means in a relationship. that is something i had to learn the hard way but very important. be real here. >> mark: don't remind me of those days. you told me, you know, years ago that you were
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homeschooled. but you had a kind of longish lunch break at your homeschooling. >> yes. i was homeschooled for fourth and fifth grade, which i interacted with my peers more than one day a week in that time. but in the lunch break, my family we'd listen to rush limbaugh on the radio during lunch. i remember that i was very, very inspired to get involved in broadcasting. i was a theater kid at the time. i was like i'm really in to politics. that was really inspiring to me. you know, i certainly haven't agreed with everything he said but i really think there is no denying that the contributions that rush limbaugh made to radio, the talent we have never seen and will never see again. completely changed the game. and i know it changed my life to listen to him. >> mark: well, he is having a tough time of it. but quickly, kat, we wish him well because this is a treatment week for his cancer. but if you had to weigh them
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in the scales of educational progress, what do you bet listening to rush or watching your teachers zoom in some lamo interpretive dance moves? >> rush by a landslide. [laughter] >> mark: okay. okay, kat. tell me quickly before we go, with the gutfeld show at 11:00, are you there at 11:00 in the evening? >> i sure am. very excited. >> mark: okay. that is exciting. we will look for you on that. we do wish -- thank you very much, kat timpf. we do wish rush all the best because this is a treatment week. he has been indispensable man and there is a generation of people that dear old kat who grew up listening to him and benefited from his wisdom day after day on the radio. this is a treatment week for his cancer. stay strong, rush.
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stay tough. we certainly hope that you can get benefit from this kind of thing. that is it from me. we will be back tomorrow night at 7:00. but do not fear, the one and only tucker carlson, he's here. right here. right now. ♪ ♪ >> tucker: good evening. welcome to "tucker carlson tonight." it's funny how change happens. you thought the big change came on election day. that is when the incumbent president lost. but that turned out to be nothing compared to the change that came two months later. on january 6, supporters of donald trump swarmed the capitol building. some forced their way inside. washington has never been the same. it may never be the same. as a result of what happened on january 6, your descendants will live in a different country. it was a pivot point in our history looking back. some in congress compared that day to 9/11.
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