tv The Five FOX News August 16, 2022 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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continue to find ways to evolve. >> i don't know you do it but you do, leaving the politics out of it, that's a tough task. chris, texas department of public safety, we'll be monitoring this, they are always updated higher. ♪ ♪ >> hi, i am greg gutfeld along with judge jeanine power, using staples -- dana perino, "the five" ♪ ♪ former president trump turning the tables on the media as republicans ramp up the pressure to release more materials from the unprecedented fbi raid on his home, the press going into full russiagate mode all trying to dispute trump's train that
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the bureau seized his passports. cbs anchor norah o'donnell tweeting "according to a doj official, the fbi is not in possession of former president trump's passports, trumpet accuse the fbi of stealing it, three passports during the search of his mar-a-lago home. the orangemen is forced to correct the record with his spokesman posting the email that backs him up, proving the agency removed his travel documents from mar-a-lago and would be returning them. media is also ramping up their good versus evil game. >> and i would say to our friends who are watching us today, vote as if your life depends on it, if kevin mccarthy threatened the possible next speaker of the house, threatened an attorney general, and says, you'd better lay off trump or else -- >> are we going to survive this? >> i don't know. the hopeful part of this is that
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america does have resilience and we do get over moments like this. >> and remember how this raid was urgently needed to protect national security? turns out merrick garland sat on his butt and waited weeks to put the search warrants. we still don't know the underlying evidence that was used to justify agents going through melania's wardrobe. right now the doj recommends to keep that sealed. but i judge set a thursday hearing to determine whether the public gets to see it or not to pick senator lindsey graham says the american public needs transparency now. >> we need the affidavit. show your cards. merrick garland can't have it both ways. without telling us why it was necessary without the affidavit, we are flying blind in the dark, and the american people don't do -- going through too much pain, too much heartache, on this effort to destroy donald trump. >> judge, welcome back to. you were missed. >> really?
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>> yes. >> thank you. [laughter] let me tell you what i think. >> going to ask you a question. >> let's remember who is conducting this hearing on thursday, the same judge who signed the warrant, okay? so you've got this judge who signed a warrant that apparently was messed up from the get-go, and i'll tell you why, if it were a search warrant and they made a decision to go beyond with a court order, they had to be some exigent circumstances, had to be some emergency, then we find out that merrick garland waited weeks before he actually made a final decision on that, then we find out that even before then, in june, the president was cooperating with the national archives people, sent him a thank you note for cooperating, so with this hearing, the judge has to decide, look, we've got the
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american public's interest in this, but the department of justice is saying, no, we don't want you to release this affidavit, the basis for the warrant, because we think it will compromise whatever investigation we are doing, that it will cause harm, and that it doesn't serve the public interest. there is sensitive information, a road map to where we are going, but on the other hand, in my 30 years in law enforcement, i have never heard of a defendant -- and remember, this is a criminal warrant based on a statute that is not a criminal statute, the national archives record, and so what he is saying -- the president saying, release it, i don't see what it says, i'm not worried about what it says. so this judge is in a box. the judge has to say, wait a minute, we've got the defendant himself, the wannabe defendant,
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saying, let it all out, the judge then has to decide, was it a wholesale fishing expedition? now we have americans tuned into this. they took passports. the media, based on nora o'donnell saying, oh, they didn't say it, you know, it's like, we got a warrant, legitimate warrant from the fisa court. but no worries, justice is still good with the fbi, if you believe that, then you got a problem. in the end, this judge, i think, is going to make a decision that it's got to be released, that they will only reject certain parts of it, -- redact certain parts of it, i think there is egg on the face. >> enough to make a 10-egg omelette, dana. didn't even realize were going to have to make up -- how do you say his name? this is the same guy that treated the rosenbergs -- they sold secrets to moscow and they
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were executed, the inference being that trump would be executed too. what rights does he have? >> a lot of the historians have been concerned for the last seven years now about norms and institutions, and the protection of the constitution, et cetera, i was just thinking about -- when you were talking, judge, the defendant -- it's not even really a defendant yet, right? and we still believe in innocent until proven guilty, that's in the constitution, at this point, i don't understand how he could say the norms of the country are at risk, but also to eat something that basically says, donald trump is guilty of selling secrets to the russians. i do wish, on the media side of things, i know you want to be first, but it's more important to be right. and the whole passport thing
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just stirred the pot even further. >> same with the nuke stuff, it just sounds so much like russian collusion. the other thing, why did it go in melania's closet, there could be a really simple answer. maybe that's where the safe was. why aren't they saying that. >> it's way too low-hanging fruit, elaborate evening gowns now, because of what happened at mar-a-lago, politically active charged rate have, thinks that president trump is being persecuted unfairly once again, the other country would just assume have president trump executed for treason. why would the fbi -- why would the biden administration take steps to put us in this position today? it's not to say that trump deserves special treatment. i understand the argument that
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those documents probably belong to the united states government, they needed to find their way back there, it sounds like they are negotiating on how to keep those things safe. seems like they are in agreement, then they said, because of an fbi source and surveillance, they have reason to believe that those documents weren't as secure as they wanted them to be. you take a step back, trump doesn't deserve special treatment. but the american people don't deserve to be thrown into another polarizing situation and have arguments where he could be having discussions where we sit around and say, oh, my god, going after trump yet again, trump trying to sell our nuclear secrets to the soviets. i don't believe either one of those are wholesale true, but you've got a lot of reason for people to sit around to make those arguments now because of this, in my opinion. >> you know, richard, happened to me, a poorly made. oh, and falls apart when you're driving. i think that is what is happening here, this narrative is falling apart as the media drives it and they don't know
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what to do. what are your thoughts besides agreeing wholeheartedly with me? >> i don't eat a burrito while i'm driving. do you really? >> we're going to be showing it in the b block. >> really. a couple of things here, listen, i think there is a lot of media speculation on all sides, right? both on the right and the left, people are trying to speculate, in melania's closet, not in melania's closet, what is classified or confidential documents that were rated, will find out tomorrow, the 18th, when the judge has its hearing. i think we should release the affidavit, normally judges don't do that because you don't want to tarnish reputations, let's release and let's get to the bottom of it, but with that being said, i think there is far too much speculation, people go, this is the folks, but think about the level of clearance that this warrant has built,
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appointed mike christopher wray appointed, also pointed by -- also signed up by merrick garland. he has decades the federal bench. progressives have knocked merrick garland for being too slow, but that is what judges do, they are judicious. on top of that commitment to a federal judge, the judge said, based on the information, report that it is very likely that the person with this evidence of somebody from the security detail, saw the classified documents, they have the mandatory ability, and they reported that they saw those documents. >> can you imagine putting your life in the hands of someone that wants to write you out like that? >> if merrick garland is so judicious, how come he called -- domestic terrorists and 60 fbi on them? i have trouble with that.
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♪ ♪ >> a big liberal city siding with hollywood. chicago police reportedly diverting some officers away from patrolling the neighborhood so they can protect tv and movies had to instead. in response to an incident that happen on a film site where a suspect lit and threw an identified object. no one was hurt but the windy city is already struggling with police staffing shortages as rampant crime continues. chicago pd saying we work closely with the city's film and
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television, need to provide safety and security for the production and the communities in which they found. george, i think one of the things is there's just not enough police. not enough law enforcement so they are diverting. he would think that the movie studios could hire private security. >> judge jeanine: that's exactly the point. i lived in chicago for several years. i would go back and forth. i love chicago. it's beautiful. the sad part is when they make a decision that they want to divert resources for people coming in to make tv shows and movies, you say to yourself, the poor people on the south side or those that are now in the loop area apparently, already having dangerously low staffing problems as it relates to the police. the tv and movie people ought to hire their own security. you think about it, the police and the businesses pay taxes for
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police to defend them and protect them. if you come in from out-of-state or you come into do a movie, maybe you should have your own security. the saddest part is 47 people were shot in chicago this past weekend. not one person was arrested. 47 shot. eight killed. eight dad. not one arrest. >> with the judge is saying. they are trying to hire their own, they are trying. they have to hire off-duty cops. >> judge jeanine: no, they don't. >> there is nobody to hire and nobody wants to come do it. that's the problem. i live in a town in georgia when a lot of filming is being done. maybe if you can keep your people see if you don't get to profit off movie industry.
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the simplest part of the social contract, security. if you can't give people a semblance of that, rebuke don't get to involve yourself in the movie industry. maybe you have other things you should focus on. may be an industry of entertainment and fun and celebrities isn't with the mayor needs to be catering to but because the people are in a dire situation. that's an idea. if you want to come to georgia, you won't get shot at but you might have to eat fried chicken and corn bread. we have a lot of movies made there. >> dana: the movie industry, they get tax breaks anyway as incentives in order to get there. >> let's talk about the problems in chicago and they go far beyond hollywood. the mayor who can't run the city and then you see it show up in so many different ways. not only that when she ran she promised she was going to support public schools. she has contention with teachers. what you have seen is on the south and west side of chicago where you have middle-class families, upper-class families who have houses.
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c.j. walker's original houses there, the first black millionaire. they have a mistrust for the police and a lack of confidence in the mayor and the city of chicago. i would predict that next year and her primary you will probably see mary lori lightfoot unseated. she ran with a lot of promises she hasn't filled any of them. >> dana: she has announced that she wants to run for office again. what do you make of hollywood? >> greg: they should stop calling it the windy city. they should call the people shot in the face city. more people shot in the face then hit by the wind. >> judge jeanine: it's windy. i was knocked down by the wind once on michigan avenue. >> greg: there is a good reason why the police are on a movie set because people die on them. just ask alec baldwin. it's totally normal to have these people here but it is a reminder that the film industry, hollywood and tv, they will
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happily denigrate law enforcement until they need them. we need a guy with a gun on set because our are staring at us. sure, i'll take pictures from the -- with the cops. they will go on twitter and crap all over the police. i have no beef if you apply the same concerns and productions for the community. what you do for the filmmakers, you do for the citizens. if you are protecting the cast of line oration providing law in order to everyone else. if you are pulling people out of unsafe areas to do it, it is b.s. >> dana: top democrat panicking about his party being out of touch is none in terms get ever closer. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: the democratic party coming to a sudden realization on something everybody already knows. nobody likes them. the guy who is in charge of getting them elected in the house divulging this quote to "the new york times." "democrats could be much more intentional about our work in rural areas, with veterans, farmers. we can talk like human beings. we can build a relationship with voters. i think most of the voters that we ask about this think that we are out of touch. they think that we are elitist. we think we are better than they are, and they don't like it. we have a likability problem. all right. i will start with you, richard. the democrat in charge of getting democrats elected in the
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house. sean maloney. one of the things that he says that i think is very interesting, he said that when we come up with terms like latinx, these are terms that are just not accepted. >> richard: i think he is right about that particular point. i think the democratic party has to really work on the work that they are doing. just a couple lease ago they passed a bill to help veterans who were harmed by burn pits in afghanistan. they have a -- have to have a conversation about the work they are doing. it's worth pointing out the only thing more unpopular than joe biden is congress. >> there is a difference between the legislation and what you say behind the microphone or the bullhorn. for sure, that's democrat problem. that problem is something they have allowed to fester in their own party.
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as someone who, when i go outside the door, i walk into a world that wasn't built for me. i never sit around and think that i am more important because of it. i walked the world to recognize my limitations. for me, it's a physical disability. for a lot of people, the democrats are pandering to or speaking for, has to do with their identity or gender. cisgender. i honestly could care less about that but we have evolved into a generation that has because of this, i am more important. i need to be represented more. i need to be heard more than the farmers on the farm or anybody else. if they have their way, there would be two classes of americans. the oppressed people and some single white males or some straight white males. they have found a way to put everyone into a group of oppressed, belittled, downtrodden victims and i just have more faith in people that are a little bit different in this way or that way to believe
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that's how they see themselves. i think even those groups of people ushering to reject the aocs of the world. that they don't need to be pandered to in such a way that they are put on a pedestal instead of elevated. >> judge jeanine: huge majority see the economy in this country. they view it negatively. they don't see a recovery on the rise. they are generally unhappy with the way things are going in this country so the question is what can the democrats do, seeing as how they have had already a year and eight months to convince people that we are going to make your life better? >> dana: they tried today. the president, to great fanfare, signed of bill called the inflation reduction act expensively passed by democrats in which for example was going to raise taxes on people making as little as $10,000 a year and in that bill, they are going to give $10,000 to anyone who makes, who wants to buy an electric vehicle. someone who makes $250,000 a year so yeah, you're out of
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touch. that's what people have been saying from the beginning. the other thing that's interesting is biden himself had long been considered the likable guy. and then, mark penn, democratic pollster, he says his research tells them that that is no longer true so when you have somebody, the leader of the party. happens to be the leader of the country, no longer considered likable, then what do you have to do? that's why you have a lot of democrat suggesting that joe biden should not run again. they have a five-alarm fire now with hispanics in particular. you not only not likable but you're out of touch and that i think is what sean maloney is trying to tell everybody. >> judge jeanine: speaking of hispanics, we are now hearing that the numbers going to be 2 million illegals come into this country. i am hearing like 500,000. 900,000 getaways. how does joe biden, how does he justify that? does he need to justify it? can he change it?
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>> greg: i want to talk about what the guys said, a veiled attack on will gives him. we predicted once woke us and would turn on itself, they would suddenly see we have to get the hell out of here because we are attacking each other. that's what happening to the democratic party. if you can't be a person, instead you are a collection of characteristics, it is a hollow, demeaning existence. you're easily dismissed and you can dismiss others as groups. dead white males, white males, whatever. their obsession to your point is that it divorces them from the real issues. you could say immigration to the suffering comes down to crime, inflation, government bureaucracy. if you went up to a modern leftist and said my god, my groceries are too high and i can't go out and walk my dog at night. identity obsessed progressive with a now you know what it's like to be a minority. and then you would go away, i'm
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black. then they go, now you are a white supremacist. it's true, richard. if you are a black conservative, you are a white supremacist. >> richard: let me say. >> greg: larry elder. >> richard: you made this argument about what minorities want and what minorities don't want. as the minority of the table, i think it's simple. we want a seat at the table. >> greg: you are sitting right here. >> richard: how many openly black gay legislators? >> greg: i don't count them. there aren't a lot of short guys in the nbn i don't count them either. >> richard: you need to have people who have different lived experiences in the room to determine the policy. >> greg: this is what is destroying education. you have to fire the white teachers before you fire anybody else because you've got to make sure that the quotas are right. it's actually poison. >> richard: don't you see the difference between what you are saying and what a lot of these politicians are saying.
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you are seeing a seat at the table and they are saying no, take your seat at the back because these people been kept down too long. >> judge jeanine: all right, guys. >> greg: you have a seat at the table. >> judge jeanine: leonardo dicaprio helping to fund lawsuits while cruising in his own gas guzzling private jet. >> tech: when you have auto glass damage... choose safelite. we can come to you and replace your windshield. >> grandkid: here you go! >> tech: wow, thank you! >> customer and grandkids: bye! >> tech: bye! don't wait, schedule now. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪
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award grants to a dark money grew. that organization then funnels millions to a law firm that's whose oil companies. this as the same guy who flies around on gas guzzling jets and hangs out on super yachts. remember when leo reportedly flew a thousand miles to accept an award for environmental activism and then turned around and flew right back. dana, dark money essentially means you put money into something and they lobby for political change but you can't go back and see who funded them. >> dana: it happens on both sides. i think what you are saying, leonardo. leonardo dicaprio is behind the collusion and the price gouging of increasing gas prices. it's incredible what happened. when you sue all the oil companies. they are going to pass costs on somewhere. there is no activist group that is more pious and ridiculous
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within these people. they are certificates. the tone of their debate. climate change people. if you disagree or if you have another opinion, you are a climate denier. it literally never ends. though one debate where the activists are not getting any new converts because of the tone of the debate. >> joey: the hypocrisy is pretty obvious. every year there is a new story about leo flying around the world. he is the most vocal so he is easiest to criticize. compared to someone like elon musk. which one of those who have done more to get us away from fossil fuels? want to tax oil companies and the other one attacks vigorously the idea of innovation. >> greg: obviously elon musk. you're looking -- we see it as a hypocrisy when one is meant to cancel out the other.
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leo realized this is the best game in town to let you do whatever you want outside of your own political issues. his name is out of gossip columns, the news. he was untouched by me too or cancel culture while lesser members of his p word posse. they would do whatever they wanted. preme too. you don't hear anything about him because he has cloaked his past and his sins in green activism so no one dare question anything else. smart move on his part. >> joey: judge, they are funding a law firm to go out and lobby. maybe the law firm is just raking in money and not getting much done. what is their effort here really about? >> judge jeanine: they can get any number of people to be a plaintiff in a class action lawsuit or any other kind of lawsuit. they are paying themselves for the hours that they are putting into the lawsuit.
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i think a point that dana made is a very good point and that is the activists are not getting any more popular. i remember, i don't know where was that, in italy? people were on the road. people were going into starbucks. americans aren't saying gee, i want to be one of them. it is their own lunacy they think they are protected. leonardo dicaprio is protected because he is an actor. it's all theater to him. it's nothing but theater. he is funneling this money so they can soon the oil and gas companies while he flies around on his jet. it's disgusting but i think he makes himself salable to the theater and the hollywood elite. >> richard there's a difference between the people who make themselves celebrities and the issue that people fight for. conservative groups want to see
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the planet taken care of. i am a hunter and a fissure. i see a lot of things i wish we were more conscientious about. it's a different issue than climate change. there is an ap poll that shows only 35% of americans even care about this issue or considered to be serious that is down from 44% in 2019. is it because biden just passed a big green new deal that people don't care anymore? they think the problem is solved? >> richard: if we are going to have a debate about dark money and i think dana is right, habits on both sides. that's what has made our politics so toxic. you can run a commercial that has paid for by people who pay for ads. we are going to have that conversation, we need to visit the impact citizen united has on our politics. but it comes to leonardo dicaprio, i think we have to acknowledge that one plane ride is not going to be the tipping point on whether or not the climate spontaneously
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combust. but we have to acknowledge, to your point, what is happening to our wetlands, what's happening with extreme weather. a couple leaks ago we saw the horrific floods in kentucky. we covered it for one day or two days, the people living in kentucky are still dealing with it. there's real impact that we as a nation have to deal with. i agree with dana, you're not going together by gluing yourself to a starbucks counter. have to meet people where they are and take them where you need them to go. >> dana: i would remind everybody, the guy who was just trying to get the work in the truck and the climate activists blocked the highway and he lost his job. >> greg: fatalities related to extreme weather have declined something like 96% over the century. >> richard: it's not about the fatalities. it's the people have to live there. >> greg: it is about fatalities. what would you measure by? >> richard: the fact people are living in kentucky and
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trailers. >> greg: people who move to areas that create higher risk. >> joey: i want to correct this one thing. don't tell the whole story. climate change people never tell the whole story. it floods in places because we spend 100 years damning it and pushing the water away from where it should naturally go. that's why the mississippi delta is a complete mess. not because of rising sea water will because we don't let the water go where it's supposed to because we want to farm here and build a business there. up next, alec baldwin lashing out at the media after the fbi blows up his story about not pulling the trigger. i think i changed my mind about these glasses. yeah, it happens. that's why visionworks gives you 100 days to change your mind. it's simple. anything else i can help you with? like what? visionworks. see the difference.
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♪ ♪ how's he still playin'? aspercreme arthritis. full prescription-strength. reduces inflammation. don't touch my piano. kick pain in the aspercreme. ♪ ♪ >> richard: alec baldwin insists he didn't pull the trigger on the movie set. the media out to get him. speak of the people talking the loudest about what happened were not on the set. "l.a. times," hollywood reporter. they talk on and on and on about what if this is one of fat. the thing they have in common,
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nobody was there. >> richard: the fbi rejected baldwin's claims that he didn't pull the trigger. what we know is that the actor is saying that he's waiting for a pending sheriff report to determine if the district attorney will bring charges. do you think there will be charges? >> judge jeanine: i don't know but i remember speaking to the d.a. some time ago and she obviously is waiting for the sheriff's report. it's interesting, you have the medical examiner who ruled that it was a tragic accident. that's the conclusion. that's something subjective. the most disturbing part of all of this is that the fbi said that that revolver was in good working order. and that in order for that projectile to come out, baldwin had to have pulled the trigger. that contradicts the exactly of prior statement that baldwin had made saying that he never pulled the trigger. the trigger had to be pulled to release that, i think it was a
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.45 colt. he comes up with the defense. the attorney says the gun was broken. if the gun was broken, why did it work? [laughter] the second thing that was the concern, you have the criminal issue and quickly we have the civil issue. he is at war with the armorer because she said she requested specific cross draw training so she would be able to teach him. in addition he says, baldwin says that it was a cold gun. there is a civil lawsuit. criminally, i don't know. may be reckless maybe negligence. >> richard: dana, to that point, he pulled the trigger. >> dana: that's the thing. i'm also curious. i wonder, how far up the gazoo. >> greg: one you can blow.
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>> dana: that's at kudzu. if he hadn't pulled the trigger he would've said "i didn't even pull the trigger. because when he didn't say until six weeks later. >> greg: i think he is on the hook for everything because he's the producer. the armorer was incompetent and she was hired for reasons other than her competence, or excellence. this is why they needed somebody like an nra instructor. they'd been demonizing the nra so they went with someone with blue heron 35 tattoos. we know he didn't mean to kill the person. we know that. the thing is he is going to be on the hook. he's got to pay a lot of money to that family. a young boy without a mother. >> richard: your take. >> joey: greg made the exact point. it isn't intentional. it isn't murder one.
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that is irresponsibility. it's in the inability to do the most basic things necessary to have firearms on set to be safe. you don't have to own a bazillion guns like i did before my boating accident at some of you will understand and some of you won't. to understand how god works, especially a revolver. single or double action. it's very simple. if double action, that means he saw the hammer or come back and go forward. a single action, he saw the hammer. physical characteristics of the gun if you the simplest understanding, he could've prevented this. he is responsible for not understanding the tool in his hands. responsible for being a boss in hiring people that didn't do it. people died. someone died. it's tragic. responsibility is still there. >> richard: we have to pull the trigger on the segment because "one more thing" is next.
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a breakthrough eczema treatment. they said it couldn't be done. because the big drug companies have billions of dollars and an army of lobbyists. but aarp has never run from a tough fight. they stood with their 38 million members and said, "enough." enough of the highest prescription drug prices in the world. together, we forced the big drug companies to lower prices and save americans money. we won this fight, but big pharma won't stop. so neither will aarp.
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hi, i'm karen. bui lost 58 pounds on golo and i've kept it off for over a year. it was so easy that the weight just kept coming off. that's when i knew that this is real. golo works. i still can't believe that i look like this. the tenth pick is in the new all-american club. that's a “club” i want to join! let's hear from simone. chuck, that's a club i want to join! i literally just said that. i like her better than you the new subway series. what's your pick?
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find your relief in store or online. ♪ >> greg: gee-whiz. you gave me some breaking news, dana. >> judge jeanine: time now for one more thing. >> dana: tell them the breaking news, judge. >> judge jeanine: the breaking news is on my phone. it says doj admits it acted outside scope of authorized by court when seizing trump passports. >> dana: yep, there we have it. i'm sure there will be more to come on "special report." >> judge jeanine: does that surprise you. >> dana: dana's corny jokes. percy joins. okay. here we go. what did the sailors use to clean their noses when they have a cold? >> judge jeanine: hoses. >> greg: swab. >> dana: anchor chief. do boats sink very often? no, usually it's just once.
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there you go. okay. why do pirates have such a hard time remembering the alphabet? >> joey: all they know is c and r. >> dana: get lost at sea. what kind of vegetable is not allowed on chips? leaks. where do sick boats go for checkups? >> joey: the doc. >> dana: that's because you are a dad. zoe joe that's exactly why. i'm real proud of that. >> greg: i'm going to do the first part of it. gee whiz, tonight's show is really good 11:00 testimony shillue, is he massives have you. andy mccarthy and going to bring intellect to my show. rob o'neill did something very important. i can't remember what it was and kat timpf. there you go. and now it's the judge. >> judge jeanine: okay. so it looks like the air force has some strong new recruits. a driver in florida saw this determined black bear scaling aa
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fence panama. carefully maneuvering over the barbed wire get to the other side before scattering. it took only 24 seconds for the bear to get over the barbed wire. he was stunned by the bear's athleticism adding he went over the fence like olympian and by the way they don't have any problem with bears over there and they often scare the heck out of bear personnel. >> greg: crazy bears. >> joey: today marks the one year anniversary we saw the plane take off from kabul and probably the most stunning images from the entire debacle in afghanistan. people eventually fell from the plane. two things here. one i had a really good friend lee bowden. he was there that day e posted on his instagram some images and posted the text between him and his wife. in the texts showed what some of the men and women there still struggle with. his last thing he wrote on his caption that day on the airfield set the standard for an operation that we told would be
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deliberate and orderly and it was anything but. i just want to say if you are still struggling with knowing this war ended the way it did go to boot campaign.org and get help. >> greg: richard, you have got five seconds. >> richard: these amazing students. >> joey: i played them in football. >> greg: yes, i did. "special report" suspect next. >> bret: richard did that very quickly. very nicely done. thank you. all right, thanks, greg. good evening. welcome to washington. i'm bret baier. president biden take as victory lap signing the inflation reduction act calling it one of the most significant laws in u.s. history. his critics say the act, the law doesn't reduce inflation and will raise taxes on average americans. one year later after u.s. withdrawal from afghanistan, we take you on patrol with the taliban. workers who lost jobs or were threatened with dismissal over vaccine refusal a
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