tv The Five FOX News March 16, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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you can see them making this late turn to the middle with willow. we'll see if they do something with the border. we'll see if there's a new republican house that changes what he does. but -- >> neil: they're reading different tea leaves. we'll see whose are right. thanks, jacqui. i apologize for the shortness of that. here's "the five." >> hello, everyone, i'm judge jeanine hero, along with harold ford jr., dana waters, jesseperino, jesse watters. it is 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ everywhere you look, the world is out of order, and it is all happening on joe biden's watch. his administration scrambling to revert financial armageddon after two big banks failed, and shocking new video shows a
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moment a russian fighter jet at taunton one of our drones before smashing right into it. there's a lot of serious stuff going on right now but what are our leaders are to? kamala is giggling her heart out on liberal late night with stephen colbert, and guess what she thinks the biggest issue is? >> one of the major issues that will define the selection? >> i think it will become as the the president has said, about seeing it through, and building on the momentum that we have achieved thus far. think about it, and only the last two years, we have, by my estimate, with the bills and the legislation we have passed, we are putting up to $1 trillion on the streets of america on the issue of climate crisis. around investment and resilience and adaptation. >> jeanine: so kamala thinks climate change is our biggest threat and while the rest of the
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world crumbles, have no fear, she says we have an extraordinary leader in the white house. >> he is an extraordinary leader, and i wish that people could see what i see because there's only one person who sits behind that resolute desk, and the decisions that that person has to make are the decisions that nobody else in the country can make. >> jeanine: but the lunacy doesn't stop there. we all know kamala is the real life version of the show "veep," with her endless string of word salad and comical mishaps. >> is it accurate? >> there are bits of it that are actually quite accurate. >> what is the role on a daily basis as you have found that? >> well, i have a great privilege of serving with joe biden, who is president of united states. >> that is an excellent answer. question was, what does the job of the vice president?
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and your answers part of the job, i'm guessing. >> my job is to do, for example, i will tell you, i was recently in munich, at the munich security conference, and... >> jeanine: the amazing part of this is that you have a woman, jesse, who is the vice president of the united states. she is in charge of the border, abortion rights, and voting rights. there's a million things she could have said, as to what the vice president does. colbert gave her a second chance at it. the woman can't even describe it. >> jesse: you know, when you go on these shows, it is choreographed, especially if you are the vice president. do you get the preinterview and then another preinterview, knows exactly what questions are being asked. she was the one that brought "veep" up. now everyone disparagingly he associates her with "veep." she was the one that introduced "veep" into the conversation with colbert, which makes no sense to me, and he tried to rescue her, and she told a story
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about how "veepy" it was the white house. and some guy set a fire in the fireplace, and didn't pull the flu out so it got a little smoky and she cackled hysterically. it wasn't even funny. she says she wants to fight the climate and that is going to be the biggest theme. then she said abortion next, then she went after desantis on ukraine. i have a feeling she would say whatever the audience want to do here, this is a late-night audience, this is targeting younger people, so those are the kind of things she wanted to hit. you can tell the ground is shifting, though, because you have jets colliding with our drones. you have the banking system kind of teetering, and joe biden hasn't even announced whether he is running for president or not, so this is kind of the relaunch for kamala, the re-re-re-launch. the rebrand. she is going to iowa today. it looks like she is trying to say, i am on this ticket whether anybody likes it or not, and this is what i am out about.
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>> jeanine: you know, harold, on a night when we are dealing with a provocation by rushing jet dumping fuel on drone and hitting it, provocation by rushing jet, she brags about putting a trillion dollars into the economy, which was the beginning of the inflation trend that we have in the united states. as if that was some great thing that happened. it is like she is clueless as to what she thinks is wonderful. >> harold: great to be back around the table with you. i would have probably scripted that a little different, talking about the accomplishment of the administration, the things we have to be looking forward to, but my politics is a little different, so i would have certainly handled it differently. as we think about those three things that are so critical to the country right now. if i were her, i would have said, look, there's a situation is serious. the president will speak for us as it relates to how we feel about interest rates, but at no time in our history has the fed been successful at fighting inflation and fighting a banking
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crisis at the same time, so they are going to have to deal with that. two, this is no time to be messing around with the debt ceiling. if you think a little bank out in california that no one had heard of, who had a bunch of idiosyncratic accountants, could put this kind of stress on our markets and economy come imagine what happens if we call into question the full faith and credit of the united states, politics has to be taken out of it. three come if you wanted to play politics, which clearly there was something to play around ukraine, i do think governor desantis has a little explaining to do about why he feels that way and if he believes that, he should defend it, but i think this russian drone thing, a little bit of it has to do with how we are performing in ukraine and the fact that we are considering -- it was announced today that one of our european allies has decided to provide more weaponry to the ukrainians. we should be doing the same thing, i believe. have set on the show and others, what other weapons and technology is needed by the ukrainians we should be in the business -- we have shown putin you can't come into a country
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and take it because i think the fundamental question is he will not stop there. anyone who believes that he would, i would love to hear the explanation. i don't disagree with you. i would have had a better script. >> jeanine: dana, the interesting part of harold's answer was the discussion of the substance of what is going on in ukraine. you know, we are literally depleting our military equipment so they can fight the war. as opposed to even discussing this, she talks about the fact, when she talks about ukraine, she talks about how she has met with leaders. >> dana: and she got to go to the munich conference fear and she gave a decent speech there, of course. it is pretty remarkable, you don't have those talking points down? i have a talking points down. i watched the state of the union speech, the president tsai finish the job 27 points, go through the list, so many things she could have said. she thinks her job is like a real-life version of "veep," imagine the writers of "veep" who thought they were writing a
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comedy, thought they were writing a documentary, could have been on netflix. she also said the most important issue is climate change. why does she say that? she thinks they are people are going to stick with her on that. remember, this is the same person, she is married to the second gentleman, the first second gentleman we have ever had, and what is his main issue that he thinks is the worst thing that has is going on? talks of masculinity, that is what he said he is going to use this platform for. the thing about julia louis-dreyfus on "veep," she plays a character that is shallow, incompetent, disingenuous, rude, and an embarrassment to the united states. i would not have made the comparison. >> jeanine: you know, greg, i've never watched the show "veep" so i cannot speak to it, but if dana is right and it is a documentary as opposed to a comedy, the question really is, right now, she is, they say, in a grudge match, not with elizabeth warren, apparently they had dinner last night, but with newsom, that they are both
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fighting to be the next person in line. what say you about that? >> greg: i don't know. i'm just jealous fear i am so jealous. to be able to feel drunk all the time without ever drinking. every time you listen to her, she sounds like a woman out at a bar on her fourth skinny margarita. and she never has to pay. it is like in her bloodstream the whole time. i was wondering if she took the comparison to "veep" as a compliment. she didn't really understand that the whole show is about a failure. it's like someone comparing your driving to ted kennedy's. she would say, i would say, hold on, the only person dumber than her is her husband. i mean, a guy who compared, you know, compared the parents were angry at a school board to what happened before the holocaust, i mean, that is worse than toxic masculinity. he could combine the things he says with her and they could go out as a team and say climate is the most important issue and if you disagree with me, you are
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worse than hitler. i think climate hysteria is a religion for lazy people, and if you can talk about sacrifice and you can sound noble but you actually don't sacrifice, right, it is for other people, not you, so you can talk about all of these things and be an advocate, but you can still fly private. i am always suspicious, and i think people are becoming suspicious of the climate religion because it is an ideology that becomes an answer for everything which means it is an answer for nothing. it is, in a way, there is a phrase in tv called "jump the shark." in this case, i believe she shot the zebra, jesse. >> jesse: [laughs] shot the zebra? >> greg: that is when you introduce something into a segment that shocks the viewer and disappoints all of your supporters. >> jeanine: is that what that means? >> greg: yes. >> jeanine: okay. >> jesse: like kamala, who also didn't see "veep" -- [laughter] >> jeanine: did and didn't get it. coming up, a liberal city plan
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for reparations is so radical that even black lives matter is calling them out. ♪ ♪ ♪ well, the stock is bubbling in the pot ♪ ♪ just till they taste what we've got ♪ ♪ ow, ow ♪ ♪ with a big, fresh carrot ♪ ♪ and a whole lot of cheese ♪ ♪ and the mirror from your van is halfway down the street ♪ ♪ well, you can say that -- ♪ wait, what? i said, "someone just clipped the side view mirror right off the delivery van." when owning a small business gets real, progressive gets you right back to living the dream. now, where were we? why, you were fixin' to peel me. [ laughter ] i brought in ensure max protein with 30 grams of protein. those who tried me felt more energy in just two weeks. uhhhh... here, i'll take that. [woo hoo!]
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♪ ♪ >> dana: san francisco facing sharp criticism for a sweeping reparations plan including from a former blm activist fear of the proposal would give every eligible black resident $5 million, wipe out all personal debt, guaranteed nearly six figure income for the next 250 years, and offer homes for just $1. what is not in the plan is a way to pay for it, and san fran officials say it is not their
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job to figure that out. but they seem to be on board with this whole plan, anyway. >> you have my 100% support and commitment to implement and, quite frankly, all 111 of these recommendations. they are all warranted. >> dana: but the plan is running into some opposition. a forma black lives matter activist is calling it out. >> it is so unrealistic to think the average family in san francisco is going to be able to pay $600,000 extra if use. it is disgusting to me that we are more focused on slavery, which ended in 1865, then we are focused on the veterans, who are on the streets of san francisco, homeless and begging for spare change, in 2023. that is where they need to start spending their money. >> dana: harold, they are moving right along in san francisco with this plan. >> harold: when i got this email, i must say, my wife and i
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immediately changed our residency from new york to san francisco. [laughter] the young man, the first part of what he said, i agree, this is unrealistic. i'm not sure this is the way you bring the country together. i think there was intentionality around discrimination and subordination, subjugation of africans from the birth of the country, but the country has progressed and we have moved on, and as we move on, we have to continue to find ways to lower the gaps in education, economic opportunity and other opportunity. this is the kind of thing, when you talk about an answer like this, that just antagonizes people, and i think you divide us even more. i think people felt this is a serious issue, serious people believe this is a serious issue but may not share my political views, not have a serious conversation about how we address inequalities and inequities, but this is not the way to do it. it in case it is, i did change my residency. >> dana: this is near to your home city, where you grew up,
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and a place you used to love. >> greg: yeah, this is -- harold is right. no one should be taking this seriously at all. this is hilarious. it is probably one of the funniest things i've ever heard. so why is it so ludicrous? why -- they did that on purpose. they don't want this. what they want is to divide people, to create another commotion over race. if you had an actual, practical plan over this, it would be modest, it would probably include -- it probably wouldn't even include payouts at all. it would be about education. it would be about, okay, part of this reparations, with or trace it back to who had slaves and who didn't, whatever, figure this out, you don't pay for education, you get the best education there is, that as a reparation. this is designed by people who are hiding their classes on behind the racism. i mean, they are hiding their classism by a race war. if we weren't sitting here
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talking about this we would be looking at pelosi, we would be looking at new sum, we would be looking at the crazy lady on the board. it is amazing, white leftists do worse things to blacks than the nations ever could. it is absolutely incredible how horrible these people, the big losers in this, just by bringing this up, our real estate agents, how do you make money selling homes for $1. and the big winner is you all. even if this doesn't happen, it plants a seed in everybody's head that frisco is a demented city that is getting more and more demented. get the hell out of there. even though this is never going to happen. >> dana: right. i guess, judge, please feel free to comment on anything you want, but if you could say, if this was challenged legally, would it be a successful challenge? >> jeanine: well, i don't know if there would be a successful challenge. you know, i might imagine they would say, maybe it is denying equal protection, whites, you
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know, maybe the irish when they came over didn't have it so great or may be the were prosecuted, you want to go back, but here's the thing that is crazy about it. what they say is there going to give $97,000 a year, 250 years. so, if i am in san francisco, i am going to find a black guy and i'm going to marry him because for sure i get $100,000 a year. [laughter] i get $100,000 a year and my kids do, too. i am lebanese christian, we weren't even over here. why should i, if i lived in san francisco, have to pay $600,000? the whole thing is bizarre. and then these people even more nuts, one of the billionaires who wants this $5 million in reparations, he is proposing a redlined district to make sure those who came in are involved in human trafficking. that they have their own red light district. these people coming up with lance, i can't even deal with them. >> dana: jesse, what about, also, we can look at this and say obviously, this is never going to happen, but there
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probably are a lot of people living with both hope they are about to get $5 million. >> jesse: they gave them false hope. the stupid white liberal with the polka dot dress is responsible, as greg said, for this catastrophe. you are raising their expectations, and then they are humiliating themselves. if you have seen the actual footage of these hearings, they are singing. they are throwing their arms up in the air. they are doing weird things with weird clothing, and they are making absolutely no sense. it is almost like they took the most uneducated black people and brought them in front of the commission and had them just riff that they want to get paid. these aren't well-thought-out arguments. you could make a well thought out argument for a reparation package. you have done it with the japanese after world war ii internment, it's been done with the jewish people after the holocaust. now, it's a little too late, but
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i'm open to listening to an intelligent argument. and the polka dot lady is destroying any hope these people ever have of getting paid. it is based on emotional trauma, which is this new thing -- they say it is generational. so, if my great-great-grandfather was a slave, they passed the emotional trauma down generation after generation after generation, and then they are owed something. but you can take that anywhere. let's say, her lebanese great-grandfather subjugated my great, great great granddaughter on one of her little ships in the mediterranean. i can keep my hand out, jeanine, and i am looking at you, janine, i know what you did to my great, great granddaughter. there is trauma. >> dana: besides the dot on the polka dot dress matter? >> jesse: the bigger the dot, the dumber the girl. >> greg: what do you think the sf board did by creating this?
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>> jesse: it is like shooting a zebra. you can't go back. >> dana: zebra can't change its stripes. >> greg: spots? >> dana: coming up, more free speech chaos, antifa smashes up another college campus that shut down a conservative speaker. ♪ ♪ this isn't just freight. these aren't just shipments. they're promises. promises of all shapes and sizes. each, with a time and a place they've been promised to be. a promise is everything to old dominion, because it means everything to you. nigerian. i got a lot of this from you. the more you learn the more you want to know, and then it just fuels that fire. it filled my soul to be honest. explore your family story at ancestry.com oh! it's daylight saving time. what's the big deal? gasp! what's the big deal? what's the big deal?
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♪ ♪ >> whoa! whoa! >> want to review? >> jesse: left-wing mob shutting down free speech began. over 100 people, including members of antifa, hurling and smashing windows and trying to disrupt a charlie kirk event at uc davis. how can you be mad at charlie kirk? the violence leading to terrible arrests, and one police officer was injured. the young conservative leader
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telling "prime time" how it all went down. >> the core issue is these college campuses, we know they become radical and are no longer places of free speech, but a speaker on an american college campus, if you want to come and talk about free speech and american values, it should not be a danger to fellow students or to the speaker. over 100 police officers were there last night. that mob was there to try to do violence. >> jesse: the war on free speech is having a chilling effect on education. listen to what this former professor had to say about it. >> it doesn't really matter if you are in the tribe or not come if you say something wrong, that is enough to get you essentially ostracized and kicked out. i think everybody walks on egg shells and we are literally moving away from the foundations of academia. >> jesse: did this happen when you were in college? >> dana: i was trying to think about that today. that professor, he will be on "america's newsroom" tomorrow, he is a science teacher. and he feels so much that he had
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to self censor that he would rather leave a job that he loves and pursue something else because he does not want to have to be a part of that anymore. i was thinking back to the professors i had, there was this one, what was his name? i can picture her. she taught political science. i never knew what her politics were, but she would stir the pot and get everybody going. it was so invigorating and so fun. i don't recall, i was in southern colorado. >> jesse: a cooking class? >> dana: political science? >> greg: you said she was stirring the pot. paula dean. >> dana: what was her name? >> jesse: when you think about it, just let us know. >> greg: or we could sit here and wait. >> dana: i'm not done! >> jesse: while she think's about the professor she does not remember, what would you like to say? >> greg: i had an interesting epiphany last night when i was thinking about this story. the students are bad, but the teachers are worse because where do the students get the stuff from? they get it from their teachers.
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adults are advocating a behavior that adults with tenure can enintoher. students cannot succeed on this behavior, like when you look at successful, well-known celebrities who parade their pronouns on twitter, it is deceptive because the only successful woke people were successful first, right? you have lady gaga with her pronouns, but she was lady gaga first feared students, however, think, oh, these successful people buy into this woke stuff, so shall i. it doesn't work that way. it is like drugs. you don't do drugs until you are successful or you never will be successful. in this case, if you get a resume with someone with their pronouns on it, you are not going to interview that person. but that person is just merely emulating something they learned from adults, who can endure such stupid behavior. >> jesse: what if these people do become moderately successful, harold?
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and then go on to become lawyers and start screwing around with the legal system and railroading conservatives, fine ones like myself? >> harold: i would agree, you are a good one. here is the thing. intellectual diversity, i remember when i was in college and law school and even high school, we came together to challenge our school, to teach more american history and more world history in a world history class we had at my high school in d.c., and they allowed us to come before the board at the school that made those decisions, the academic board, and we had a great back and forth. they challenged us, we challenge them come in over a period of time they began to open up the curriculum in many ways. it was an enrichment. we had these huge balls and -- intellectual brawls, no brawl physically, violently. if you cannot entertain and sit and have a substantive and good debate with someone whom you disagree with, you are not going to be a good lawyer. you are not going to get into a
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good law school. if you do, because i think the standards are changing everywhere, god forbid what is going to happen to the country if you don't understand that you can disagree with someone but like them a lot. you can think their argument does not measure up, but you can continue to have debates and conversations. the thing i worry most about is there professors, those in the executive at the schools who are promoting this and coddling these kids. we talked about this -- >> greg: this is my point fearful they profit after but the students don't. none of those students you would ever higher. they could ever work on "the five" if they can't tolerate other opinions. >> harold: here's the thing, they will be able to find a job somewhere where that viewpoint is held and never ever figure out a way to get together to say, look, you have an opinion, i have an opinion, let's debate about it. just like you and i am the last segment, when it comes to reparations from if you put together education package, economic opportunity package, we might be able to find a majority. to your point, that last segment, i am still bothered by it because it is the most divisive thing you can do to try
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to solve a real problem, and this is a symptom of it, what we are seeing at this college. i didn't mean to interrupt. >> jeanine: no, you were going, and that is exactly where it would start. it is divisive and that is what the left has been doing. it started about, what, seven years ago, where was it, at berkeley, when somebody went to speak there, milo yiannopoulos, whatever his name was, they wanted to break down the school, nobody got arrested, they smashed windows, and ironically, the beginning of free speech, considered at berkeley. but these people, you know, when you look at the corporations that gave money to black lives matter, those corporations are being run by the kids who have gone through these schools, and we talked about this before, they have gone up the ladder. they have gone up the letters at some of these corporate businesses. they are already there. the question is, they are in the justice system, not yet, but they are getting there, and the left is creating this division and this hate. forget about -- how can you
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possibly do that in a law school? the first amendment is about free speech and freedom of press. right now, people who are insulting other people, alleging defamation on the part of charlie kirk, saying he hates trance, that is just a lie, it is defamation. nobody is doing anything about it except that they are apologizing, but what is happening now is a lot of young students are recognizing that college is nothing but a lot of nonsense, and they are turning away from college and they are turning toward apprenticeships, and apparently apprenticeships have increased by more than 50% in the united states since the pandemic, and there are now almost a million apprentices in the past few years. and colleges are suffering the worst -- what am i looking for, the -- >> jesse: brain drain? >> jeanine: whatever, since the pandemic. so everything has changed. young students know that they are purposely choosing
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apprenticeships over colleges, and so they are recalibrating. they don't want to be a part of this craziness. they want to be able to make money. when these people get out of college, they are not going to be able to make money anyway. >> harold: doesn't make you think differently about marrying a black man in san francisco? >> jeanine: well... [laughs] i'm not going to san francisco under any circumstances, so yes. >> jesse: if you want to be judge jeanine's apprentice, contact beard up next, liberal covid panic gets dumber. the ladies of "the view" are still afraid of grocery stores. this is so stupid. ♪ ♪ what does it mean to be ever better? its your customers getting what they ordered when they expect it. discover how ryder ecommerce makes your customer's experience ever better.
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i give them a big tip because they don't always pay their people well, so that has been an issue, i think, for the company, but man, you can get toiletries, fire logs, those big bounty to towels. >> greg: somebody brings them to her! so they incur the risk. >> dana: exactly. >> greg: we can't do a covid segment without hearing from dr. fauci still whining about being the target of g.o.p. attacks because he claims to have always told the truth. >> why do you think that you are the target of so many accusations about covering up the source of covid-19? >> i think it is pretty clear that it is politically motivated. the idea -- i don't know what they are talking about covering up, i mean, i have been totally transparent throughout. >> greg: that's a lie. a lie, i say. all right, dana. you are probably with me the most during covid, doing this
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show. >> dana: i mean, yeah, or upstate. >> greg: no, we were always fighting to get back here, remember? >> dana: yeah. >> greg: this is what we always talked about. there were people in the media that were advocating brutal restrictions that only they could endure. >> dana: and they could afford. >> greg: and they could afford. >> dana: on the very last day we have the show here, we were sitting right here and i said i am worried about guys who drive a cab, because if everybody leaves the city, there is not going to be any money for them, they are not going to be able to feed their families. a lot of them -- think about the stress that they had. and then there were more wealthy people who said, i'll just sit home, and you can deliver me my hamburgers, you can get my bounty towels. >> greg: my giant towels. she has a big slob. >> dana: she must be. the last thing i would say about this, the women of "the view" are doing a disservice to other women in this way.
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that for people who are still so concerned about covid, if you want to wear a mask, it's fine, but the ones that are being encouraged to continue to hide their faces and hide behind the mask, you see this often with middle school teams, even elementary school preteen girls, that want to hide, and that is a terrible way for them to learn about life and move forward. i can't wear a mask their entire life, and these women do nothing to help them. >> greg: no, they should be the ones who only wear the mask's. >> jeanine: you know what? i don't -- i don't really mean to take her side but i must tell you that the pandemic has changed a lot of our behavior. and a lot of us have made the decision that, you know what, i would rather go to amazon and get that vitamin tomorrow night when i get home because i'm not going to have time to go to a story. i think a lot of people who, you know, you still expect to run out of buy dinner and bring it home, they now use, you know,
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seamless and everything else to make their lives easier, spend more time with your family, your dogs, whatever it is. i don't think it is so terrible. what is dumb is wearing a mask or not going out, specifically because you think you are going to get some kind of a virus. when we found out six months ago, you don't need a mask for that. so a lot of people have changed their behavior. they just come out and make it seem like i am wearing this mask because i am worried. it's over. >> greg: you know, harold, this reminds me a lot of howard stern for rating those who were critical of lockdowns because he was doing a lockdown in a compound in the hamptons. i think this is what is driving people crazy. it is easy for these elitists to talk about lockdowns and how great it was because they are not dealing with the hardship of it, like lower income families are dealing with, and being at home, all of these changes are not positive for most people.
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in fact, most people don't want these changes. >> harold: you know, i agree. i think a couple of things. one, i have moved on, and i have moved on to my set all along, i remember the very first show that you guys had me on back in april of 2021, we talked about being vaccinated, getting vaccinated, i didn't know anybody here, i had met dana, jesse, you said once we get vaccinated, you would feel more comfortable about going out and being active, and i have that opinion, you said the same thing. that's how i have approached this. i think the real area, judge, i think you are right, education is the first area, but two, the area where you have seen a real change also is how the workplace is defined. you see a lot ac of companies across the country, who work in a corporate setting or an office setting, really losing out because they have no mentors and they are having a hard time realizing they can't do it all on their own. one of the great things about our country can we have to realize, being on a team is the way you win, whether in the
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office, school, life, church, sports, and we are teaching a generation of kids that they can do everything on their own. this country has never been that way and we want prosper going forward. >> greg: that's a good point. they are working on their own or they can't trust people who are different from they are. >> harold: exactly. >> greg: jesse, do you think "the view" shot the zebra? >> jesse: years ago. on "the view," they are using both pandemic to live like pampered hermit spirit >> greg: right, and i'm a pampered hermit. >> jesse: there is no covid, you do not need the trainer coming to the house, you don't need chauffeurs, you don't need to wall yourself off from the public because oh, the public is so gross. i would rather just stay home and have everybody wait on me. at that lifestyle is fine, but don't say you are doing it for covid. you are doing it because you like to live like a socialite. >> greg: this is exactly what we were talking about before. this is a class issue.
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this is when she talks about race because she does not want to be called out for her classism. >> dana: i feel a monologue coming on. >> harold: i can feel it coming out tonight. we're going to be talking about this, dana, on our show. she is on with me. okay, had come americans have had enough of crappy customer service and they are ready for revenge. ♪ ♪ lomita feed is 101 years old. when covid hit, we had some challenges. i heard about the payroll tax refund that allowed us to keep the people that have been here taking care of us. learn more at getrefunds.com. bye, bye cough. later chest congestion. hello 12 hours of relief. 12 hours!! not coughing?
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t ouour juryry aorneneys hehelpou ♪ ♪ >> harold: americans are out for revenge after years of terrible customer service. we have all been there. super long waits with that of ongoing elevator music and when you finally get through to someone, it is a robot. one person said average wait times have tripled since 2020. have you had this experience? >> jeanine: absolutely. there is one situation i had, they were in the wrong. i could prove it. i could go to court and prove it. all the evidence come all of the picture, all of the time, everything, every time i called, oh, you sound so right, mr mrs. pirro -- >> harold: a person? >> jeanine: i had to wait hours, then i would get someone, the next person, after like ten tries, i got nothing. you know what, i gave up, i lost
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money, what am i going to do, go there and beat them up? >> harold: that's a good point. the zebra exhibition at the zoo, did you get through for your tickets or he had to wait? >> greg: they won't let you shoot zebras at the zoo, jesse. customer service needs its own customer service, right? you call that first and complained to them about the customer service, and they enter -- whatever, it's almost over. you know what bothers me -- >> harold: intercede? >> greg: the thing that bothers me most about this is when i called to complain something and it goes on and on and on and i realize they are right. [laughter] >> jeanine: no! >> greg: it is kind of like when you order something, some food or something, and that it shows up while you are on the phone and you are like, i've got to go. food is here. bye. [laughter] that happens like 50% of the time. >> dana: the amount of anxiety in our household when customer service has to be called is through the roof.
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peter cannot stand not being able to get hold of somebody. >> greg: has a specific voice. >> dana: yes, the mean british voice, that does exist. i go and hide in the bedroom while he makes the phone calls. i also have had recent good luck using the text message feature for customer -- >> harold: the chat feature. >> dana: the last two times i've used it, it has went well. >> jesse: i was at the dmv this morning and had excellent customer service. i went in and i filled out the paperwork, and i filled it out wrong, and what did they do? they filled it out correctly for me. >> jeanine: no. >> jesse: then i had to go out and unscrew the plates from the car. i can screw and i can unscrew. they came out and tried to help me with some tools. >> jeanine: where is this? >> jesse: in new jersey. i go in there and jesse jr. is all over the place, they gave him a plastic dinosaur to play with. >> jeanine: this isn't true. >> jesse: perfect customer service at the dmv. >> dana: tell the governor about the great job. >> jesse: it has nothing to do with murphy.
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from mercedes-benz. see your dealer for exceptional offers on mercedes-benz electric vehicles. ♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: it's time now for "one more thing" and dana goes. >> dana: i had a great time together talking to benjamin hall for a good long time on the podcast. i zipped through the book and wherever i landed whatever note i had taken on that page that's what i asked him about. there is a lot of great things you wouldn't have heard before. and that posts tomorrow in a documentary -- the documentary is this sunday 9:00 to 11:00 p.m. eastern. i was trying to think of another time frame because it's very
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late for me. check out my short questions with judge jeanine on fox news digital, foxnews.com find it there. >> judge jeanine: harold? >> harold: a library invented oregon to see the package containing a book that was returned after four decades. the hockey trick. a copy of the hockey trick came with a library card and apology letter and $20 check to cover the overdue fees. the book was due on april 25th, 1979, nearly 45 years ago. everybody won there. >> judge jeanine: that's incredible. all right, greg? >> greg: what a shown the dana perino, paul mauro, johnny joey jones, kat timpf. can i please do greg's guess that sound? no. all right. [laughter] >> judge jeanine: okay. all right. >> greg: guess that sound. play it. [weasel] >> greg: what's that sound?
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>> dana: bird. >> jesse: toy train. >> harold: bird. >> judge jeanine: car horn. >> greg: guess that sound, play it. that's a ma marmet. >> judge jeanine: heart stopping video from miami trapped in a submerged vehicle after the car swerved off the road to avoid oncoming accident. officers from miami-dade county police department dove under water where luckily able to find the car seat by feeling around. they broke it off and pulled the drowning child from the car. crew members immediately began cpr to resuscitate the toddler, took him to the hospital where he was stabilized. his father says he owes his and his son's life to the officers who responded. congrats miami-dade police department. bravo. >> jesse: congrats. you ever wondered what the u.s. presidents looked like if they were professional wrestlers? take a look at bill clinton. impeach that guy.
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c.w.? kind of like stone cold with hair. let's see obama? now, that guy wouldn't have lost any house seats. finally, sleepy joe? yeah, is he not falling off a bike. tonight "jesse watters primetime" school forces kids to eat bugs to fight global warming. the bug eating student will be here live. >> judge jeanine: fantastic. >> judge jeanine: that's it for us. "special report" is up next. hey, bret. >> bret: another good booking. geographic welcome to washington i'm bret baier. jeclipping the drone's propelle, that leads to its crash. horrific automobile accident near the southern border involving human smugglers takes the life of a woman and her granddaughter. we will take you there and we talk about the border crisis and other issues with arizona democratic senator mark kelly. >> bret: breaking tonight the china connection. america's most
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