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tv   Jesse Watters Primetime  FOX News  June 29, 2023 4:00pm-5:00pm PDT

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and legally surrender a newborn. so far over a hundred baby box have been placed around the country at fire stations, 32 babies have been surrendered safely. amaze ping. stick with us tomorrow on special report we'll have more rulings on the supreme court. thanks for listening i'm gillian turner in washington. jesse watters prime time starts right now. jesse this might be the last time i get to say hi to your mom because you're leaving this hour. >> all he cherish this moment. >> jillian: thank you. >> jesse: fox news alert, the supreme court has ended affirmative action. universities can no longer accept or deny college applications based on race. but there's a loophole and we'll have more on that in a few minutes. affirmative action started in the '70s. the idea, good intentioned, make it easier for minorities to get accepted into good schools. but while it got easier for blacks and latinos, it became harder for asians and whites.
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at harvard a black plicatae cream of the crop had a 56% chance while whites and asians with the same qualifications had a 15%. a black applicant had a higher chance to get in than a top asian or white student t supreme court ruled 6-3 that's unconstitutional racial discrimination probed by the equal protection clause t14th amendment. chief justice john roberts who authored the majority says this, quote. eliminating racial discrimination means eliminating all of it. the guarantee of equal protection cannot mean one thing when applied to one individual and something else when applied to a person of another color. roberts is saying, basically, you can't unfairly discriminate against whites in order to help blacks. all discrimination's wrong. harvard university made race a factor in every single step of of the application process, from
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the second they accepted the application to the second they accepted or rejected it, race was used in their decisions. the court says harvard's admission process relies on a stereo type that, quote, a black student can usually bring something that a white person cannot offer. justice clarence thomas wrote this. the court sees the university's policies for what they are. rudderless, race-based preferences designed to ensure a particular racial mix in their entering classes. those policies fly in the face of our color blind constitution and our nation's equality ideal. the court found that harvard, for the last decade, created the same exact racial mix of every single freshman class. so how did these harvard officials decide that this was going to be the racial mix of every single harvard freshman class year after year after year? well, it wasn't based solely on
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merit. so if harvard is deciding the perfect racial by chart year after year, and it doesn't even reflect the demographics of the country, someone's being racially discriminateed against and that's unconstitutional. the court says schools can still consider financial background, but can't assume a black applicant is poor just because they're black. clarence thomas writing again, this. quote, individuals are the sum of their unique experiences, challenges and accomplishments. what matters is not the barriers they face but how they choose to confront them. and their race is not to blame for everything, good or bad, that happens in their lives. a contrary myopic world view based on individual's skin color to the total exclusion of their personal choices is nothing short of racial determineism. race dot not value your success in life we're all born with free
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will and we can decide how we live our lives. black people aren't poor because they're black. there's poor black people and there's poor white people, poor asians and poor hispanics. it's not the job of the judicial system to slow certain people down and speed others up. some people are born with fathers who went to harvard. some people are born on third base. and some people are born with nothing and work their tail off and become billionaires. an administrator in cambridge massachusetts isn't god and the country grease. around 70% of the country says race should not be a factor in college admissions. but if you turn the channel it was armageddon. >> is this leading to no women in colleges soon? who knows. >> we will begin to see a kind of segregated higher education landscape. >> this is tanamount to sticking a dagger in our back. >> the group that has been most
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successful and accessing it is white women. >> jesse: and president joe biden agrees. >> he said this court is not normal. what did you mean? >> what i meant is it's done more to unravel basic rights and basic decisions than any court in recent history. >> thank you. >> thank you, thank you, thank you. >> don't go anywhere, it's a very exciting day around here. we'll have reaction. >> jesse: i don't know where the president left but that's what he does. prime time acknowledges that many black americans are heart broken by this decision. we understand that. many black americans acknowledge that they never would have achieved a certain level of success if it hadn't been for affirmative action. they own the fact that they were admitted because they were black and maybe they didn't have the perfect application. and i'm sympathetic to that. i get it. but a white person who's more
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qualified was discriminated against and didn't get in. and when you discriminate on race, some people win and some people lose. do you want to discriminate against someone because something they can't control? because of the way they were born? and there's a big stigma when it comes to affirmative action. you can be the most qualified black guy out there who got into harvard on merit and then got a great job out of school but in the back of your head you think, is this because of the color of my skin? michelle obama herself said that question nagged her. and then there are people like clarence thomas, not a fan of affirmative action, who were told on national tv that the only reason you're on the court is because you're thomas, you ke action. that's one of the reasons why he graduated from yale, and we know that's one of the reasons he's on the supreme court. >> jesse: okay. clarence thomas is the black
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face of white supremacy and the poster child for affirmative action? come on. this ruling's big and looks air tight, but there's wiggle room for race to play a role. >> the court says, quote, nothing in this opinion should be construed as prohibiting universities from considering an application's discussion of how race has affected his or her life. but it's, it's -- but be it through discrimination or inspiration or otherwise. end of quote. >> jesse: so the schools can't put in writing that they discriminate based in race, but if an applicant writes their college essay about their experience as a black american or their experience being discriminated because of race, that will probably help their chances, in all honesty. and harvard's aware of the college essay wiggle room thing so racial discrimination in practice will probably still exist. it will probably take a few more lawsuits to be completely
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extinguished and biden's working all the angles. >> today i'm directing the department of education to analyze what practices helped build a more inclusive and diverse student bodies and what practices hold that back. >> jesse: prime time has no problem with diversity. we like diversity. but unfair discrimination to achieve a random level of diversity is unconstitutional. and biden needs to watch his step. the court saw this coming. chief justice roberts writes, quote, universities may not simply establish, through application essays, or other means the regime we hold undlaufl. what cannot be done directly cannot be done indirectly. so the affirmative action battle isn't over and the courts are watching for unconstitutional workarounds. politically the last major supreme court decision on abortion helped the democrats in the midterms. so how will this supreme court decision on affirmative action play politically? we asked ron desantis about it
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earlier. >> affirmative action, good-bye. is that something that you think might have a big impact going forward? >> well, in florida, we have race blind anyways and we've done that at our state university. we're proud of that. we judge on merit. we're not going to try to divvy you up by skin color. that is the absolute appropriate decision for the country and we'll be much better off. the left wants to divide us. and that's not healthy by society. your grades, all that, let's judge people on their merits. >> jesse: why do you think the left uses race as such a billy club against republicans. >> i think that historically the left would try to use class, but that doesn't work for them anymore because the blue collar folks are with us by and large. and so they have to figure out how can they divide and so race and trying to exacerbate those is the obvious things. and in florida, we don't do any of the woke nonsense and yet
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i've had more african-americans leading state agencies than any governor in the history of florida. i've appointed four hispanics to the florida supreme court. i've appointed the first jamaican american. not because they checked those boxes but because they rate at the position and that's thousand how it should be. >> jesse: we'll show you the full interview in a few minutes. remember the court didn't strike down diversity tit struck down discrimination. the court merely said the constitution doesn't allow racial quotas in admissions. the real i shall is why have african-americans not achieved on average comparatively a higher level lev academic success. the answer isn't found in the court system. the public school system, in this country, is a disaster, especially for african-americans. and there should be a reckoning. ultimately the value of a good education is instilled by parents in the home and obviously poverty plays a role but again there's more poor whites than poor blacks in this
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country so it's up to society as a whole to lift people up individually, and that can be done through the private sector, charities, through the government, churches. but there has to be a change in the heart, and in the head. and we have to recognize that we're responsible for our own decisions. and life's the result of all of the decisions we've made. and america will figure it out. we always do it. together. let's bring in attorney den marie davis hicks and sean davis ceo of the federalist. all right, gwen, start us off are you sad about this decision? >> i am very sad about this decision. >> jesse: tell us how you're feeling. >> i'm going to bring a diverse and legal perspective to the station and to the thought process. what i will say is that, as an african-american woman, thinking
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about this whole situation, it affects -- it can be so beneficial for everyone to have affirmative action and let me tell you why. hold tight with me. what i will say is that the business of it, by having affirmative action, it brings about diversity. diversity in the school system, diversity on the college campuses, and diversity of thought. if all the applicants that are accepted come into the school looking the same and sounding the same, often times it will be in a think tank, a bubble, essentially, where everybody can be thinking the same. whereas here, it is awesome to have affirmative action where it's helped several people, like clarence thomas, justice jackson, and a lot of others as well, too. see, one of the things in justice jackson's decent that she pointed out a sim applicant in a similar situated situation,
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which is important, one applicant can be a seventh generation applicant that had been to a certain school, had endowments, had money, had higher people to help apply for college, has more access to things versus someone who might be a first-generation person of color. that same applicant could have the same scores, the same everything, and not be accepted just because of race. it evens the playing snead it's a legacy admission. that's something the court will also look at. sean, you just heard gwen. obviously she's affected by this. what would you say to her that this feels like they're taking down diversity and opportunity? >> i think what they're taking down is racism. we've heard a lot about systemic racism over the last couple years. there's no more systemic form of racism in america than the racist admissions policies for major universities.
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and i think today is a great day because, finally, according to the dream that martin luther king jr. espoused on the mall, we're actually going to be able to judge people by the content of their character and not of the color of their skin. and to this idea that affirmative action is good because it helps one person or this person, it does. it certainly helps some people but at what expense. what about all the asian people with great marks, great test scores, great grades, who are discriminated against, not because they did anything wrong, but because they were born in the wrong place or they had the wrong color skin. i think that's something that is just impossible to justify morally. >> jesse: gwen how do you justify the asians being discriminated against at a huge level? >> i will say you have to look at the totality of the applicant, how well rounded, what are they involved in. the totality of everything as they are applying to schools. and that's something, too, that has to be considered. it's not just a applicant and a
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gpa versus gpa. what is the extra curricular what is the totality of everything which is very critical here as we're looking at it. and also in response to the statement, what dr. martin luther king would say, i would say that dr. martin luther king would say all men and i would say women are created equal. and so with that said, we all know, and it's been historical as well, too, which is pointed out in some of the decent that all men are created equal, there's been a history of that not being true. so constitutionally that is not, on its face an issue. we're still working hard for it. >> jesse: sean you're a lawyer. let's hear you respond to that. >> i'm sorry, i didn't catch that. >> jesse: i think she's saying that all men are created equal, that wasn't really the reality when the constitution was written. 30 seconds. >> oh, no. we've all been created equal from the beginning we're made in the image of our creator. but just because we are equal in the eyes of our creator with
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equal odds doesn't mean we all have equal abilities. i wasn't built and made to play football or be a big weight lifter and that's fine. but when it comes to academic stuff we should be judging people based on their academics not on the type of pigment they have in their skin. >> jesse: good discussion guys thanks so much for joining prime time. >> coming up, i grab a slice of pizza with ron desantis. ♪ hey, dad. i got an a on my book report. that's cool. and i went for a walk in the woods and i didn't get a single flea or tick on me. you are just the best. -right? i'm great. -you are great. oh, brother. this flea and tick season, trust america's #1 pet pharmacy. chewy.
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>> jesse: new york city's making this ridiculous move to ban coal fired pizza ovens. why? because they say they're causing global warming. the desantis campaign heard that and reached out anked me if
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i wanted to reach out and grab a slice with the governor. i said, sure, let as go to grimaldi. 's. governor this is anthony one of the co-owners hear. >> thanks for being down in florida. >> you are tea best. >> crazy ovens the government wants to crack down on. >> this is the culprit. this guy. this is a hundred percent american. us cole from pennsylvania, the best cleanest burning cole there is. >> i can tell you in florida when they went over the gas stoves we just made gas stoves tax free in florida, no gas tax, we will do something similar for coal fired ovens so if we need new york city pizza to come to florida we're going to roll out the red carpet for you guys. >> thank you governor. >> just let'ser rip like this. >> yes, sir. >> so this is the coal fired oven pizza and according to the government this is killing the environment. let's have a slice.
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>> let'er rip. >> oh, man. >> that's good. >> really good. >> the idea they would be going after this, i mean, honestly i see a lot of people leaving new york who complain about what goes on up here but even i wouldn't have believed they would have dreamt of going after this. this is a staple of the city. >> of all the things going on here, you have crime, homelessness, drugs, they're going after ovens. why does the government do that? >> they just want to control. you have an itch on the left, they want to control behavior. we saw the same thing with covid. a lot of that wasn't about your health, it's that they wanted to control your behavior. they just don't want people to be happy and make their own decisions. they were going after gas stoves in florida, we made them tax free. we may have to do some incentives for the coal fired pizza because we'll take it. >> they're going to want us to microwave this pizza. so you're running all over the place, you're in the border. you just got back from texas. after seeing what's going on down there, has that changed your opinion of immigration?
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>> it confirmed what i had known. i've also been down at the border in arizona and it's worse than you think when you actually get down there. and the impunity with which the cartels operate, i was literally at a place in arizona, there was a piece of wall that just kind of stops. so the guy just goes on the other side of where the wall ends, looks out, just motions people to go. there's no border patrol to be found, they're in town processing people. they're bringing product into our country killing a lot of people. one of the things i saw, the places where there were barriers, the cartels actually cut through the steele beams and they'll smuggle in backpacks with a lot of drugs. so what i said is, wait a minute, we defend the territory of our own country, we'll have military and everyone down there. if you are in the cartels cutting through our fence to bring drugs in, that's going to be the last thing you do because we're going to leave you stone cold dead. we are having adequate rules of engagement. >> jesse: what is bidenomics? >> bidenomics is you pay more for the necessities of life. and he has this grand global warming vision with all the
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green new deal. you will pay more for everyday energy, transportation and groceries. we've seen it happen in other parts of the world, that's what he wants in store for the average american. >> jesse: he's listening a lot to aoc. aoc's probably right around the corner here. she has huge influence on this administration. some people say the squad calls the shots at this white house. how do you interpret that? you're a florida guy when you see these people up in new york saying these crazy things. >> the last time i saw aoc was during covid when she was attacking florida for being open, next thing you know she's on south beach living the life. we welcome all commerce. we can be the world's dominate energy producer. aoc and the green new deal they want to do, they'll let china do the stuff with impunity, improceeds draconian restrictions on us, it makes our manufacturing less competitive with china and we've had a hard enough time keeping up with china. >> jesse: do you think china has something on the bidens? >> i think the bidens have lined
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their pockets in a variety of different countries, including china, and i think biden has been very deferential to xi jinping. why would you be doing that given that china clearly represents our toughest adversary right now. >> jesse: when you see hunter get away with tax fraud and you see all this money flying into the family bank accounts and all these lies being told by the president, if you ever were to become president, would you have an attorney general that would look knees these crimes? >> we are going to have one standard of justice. and right now, if you are connected to the dc ruling class, you get a pass on a lot of conduct. if hunter were a republican, he would have been in jail a long time ago. and so there's not going to be any preferential treatment for these people. if they've committed crimes, they are going to have to live under the same set of laws that the rest of us have to do. >> jesse: let's talk less and eat more pizza. >> all righty. let's do it. what's your favorite type of pizza. you've spent time in new york. >> jesse: i like the grandma slice, i love the margarita.
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gramaldi's has the best slice around. they're good guys, they love fox and that's one of the reasons we're here. >> and they have outposts in florida and i'll tell you what they do in florida is excellent. >> jesse: your wife, they say, is your secret weapon. why is that? >> well, one, i mean, she's just a good person. she's a great person, great wife, and a great first lady that's helped a lot of less fortunate people so people are just drawn to her but she's very passionate. she's a true believer in what we've done in florida and that this country needs to get on a better course. so i think when it's authentic people can kind of see that and it becomes infectious. >> jesse: more popular than you. >> look, i'll tell you this, she would never want to run, but if i were like a republican running in a primary, i would never want to run against her. she would be really really tough because people like her. >> jesse: do you hear from voters in florida, ron we miss you, you're out in iowa, you're out in new hampshire. >> i'm still working though. we're signing bills still.
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we're vetoing bills. we're still doing all of that. >> jesse: you're doing both, running for president and governing. >> i'm just sleeping less. yeah. we vetoed a bill on monday, they wanted to raise interest rates on consumer loans i'm thinking they already have enough biden flailings let's stand up for the little guy so we did that. we signed some good legislation this week and we did more. you just have to prioritize. i don't watch tv or do other stuff, i look after my wife and kids with them, do what i have to do as governor and do this. >> you watch fox though. >> we do. we're definitely going to have to start watching at 8:00 when you take over. congratulations. >> thank you very much. i appreciate that. is this where you expected to be right now when you announced right now you're about 30 maybe 40 points down? the primary. how would you assess yourself? >> yeah, look, i mean, most people aren't even paying attention. i don't expect to see any major shakeup. i think as we'll go, we're laying the ground work to be able to do well in iowa, new hampshire and nevada and super
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tuesday it's laborious and when i found in the early states, they know i'm a good governor, they know florida's done well. they like me. and then when they get to see me talk about the vision, some of the things you and i have talked about, some other things, you know, they're really impressed and a lot of them want to help. so we just have to take that case in all those states for the next many months. >> jesse: when you approach people, voters, in these town halls and diners, when they come up to you and shake your hand, what's the main thing they tell you? >> a lot of them say, you know, thank you for running. you know, i was really impressed with what i saw and i want to be helpful. we've been winning a lot of people over. these are very discerning voters and kind of the people coming out now are like really really engaged voters. i think as we get closer you're going to see more voters engage in the process. people want to see you and they want you to make the case. that's what we want to do. >> trump says you're disloyal. do you feel that way? >> disloyal to who? politicians have to earn support. they're not entitled to support.
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i did a lot for him in 2016 and 2020 by the way, was happy to do it. but at the end of the day, you know, i'm loyal to my family, to our constitution and to the good lord. and i have a vision. i think i'm the guy that can beat biden. but even more importantly, no more excuses on these issues. i'm going to get all of this stuff done. we'll have a plan on day one to get going and get cracking. we'll give you two great terms for eight years and really get the country on a fund mentally different path. i think i'm the guy to do it and so i have the responsibility to step up and serve. >> jesse: what's with gavin newsome? >> well, you know, i was born and raised in florida. i never saw a california license plate in my life in florida. and why would you? why would people leave a san diego or los angeles and since i've been governor we've seen a huge rush of people moving clear across the country to leave california, leave san francisco, leave la to come to florida.
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nobody -- california had never lost population for its entire history until he became governor. and so i think he sees people leaving. i think he sees that there's deterioration and i think he's lashing out. >> jesse: do you think newsome's trying to be next in line and jump kamala harris? >> you know, what i told them is stop messing around on the sidelines. like either do it or not. like are you going to take on joe, if so step into the ring and do it. so i think he's kind of maneuvering in the background. you know, that would be interesting to see if biden doesn't ultimately make it, how that resolves itself. >> jesse: do you think biden is going to make it? >> look, i think that people want to move on from biden. i think that's very, very clear. i don't know if he's going to get that message and so he may very well try to stick it out. we'll be ready for hover. because i think the thing about the democratic party is biden has huge problems we all know that but we talk about this corruption, what does he have going for him?
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harris is impeachment insurance sno matter what he does, no one wants harris and it's almost like let him finish out. because people know if she was president, as bad as biden did did it would get worse. so they would have a real clown show if biden wasn't able to make it. >> jesse: governor eat some pizza. >> will do. i appreciate being here. >> jesse: so what the heck's happening to texas? prime time's going to go down there and save it. ♪
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homeless people across austin. the lone star state's getting san franciscoed and texans are ashamed. >> it is a landfill. this whole plays looks like what you're looking at right here. gains creek is right there at the bottom. this whole place looks just like this. i'm ashamed, man. i'm ashamed. >> jesse: their nature trails and parks, i've been there, i've walked there, they're gorgeous, have just been pock barked homeless tents. actually full on campgrounds for homeless. bodies lined up, needles everywhere, kids walk there. people are scared. >> all this junk is in the creek. it's in the trees, in the creek, everywhere. there's a generator right here. this whole place has a different feel to it now. it feels dangerous down here and it's never felt that way before. >> jesse: austin spent over 60 million on homeless, and the homeless population went up.
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what's that tell you? well, two things. someone's stealing the money, or it's a problem that money alone can't solve. documenting austin streets and homeless team member tim bolding joins me now. so, tim, when you talk to the homeless, why do they say they love austin? >> so they love austin because of the ability to camp and because of the ability to get resources and services. >> jesse: do the politicians have a law that allows camping everywhere across the city? >> well, that's a trick question. so we had a law, that law got repealed or pulled back, and then we went for a few years and then the voters decided that they'd had enough and they voted back in the law. >> jesse: okay. >> so currently there is a law,
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but the like number of years that we went without it have allowed for this buildup to happen. >> jesse: and now it's too late because, you know, you basically have to liquidate these places, extinguish them. it looks unsanitary ascary, dangerous. what are the regular people that used to walk these trails tell you? >> they don't tell us much anymore because they don't go to these places very often anymore. >> jesse: so the homeless have crowded out the city's most beautiful parks, and no one's doing anything about it? is there any sort of ground swell? >> yes, and no. the city is actually starting to clean these camps up, as we release these videos, and have started tracking this. they have started making moves to end some of the bigger camps. but there are -- i mean, these pop up overnight, you know, and
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they can grow very big very quickly. and as everybody knows, the city's resources are limited, and, you know, we have, you know, a police force that's been whittled down and response is just not where it should be. >> jesse: for the love of god can we please not make texas san francisco? for the love of god! i mean, we have texas, we have to keep texas texas. tim thank you so much and thanks for documenting these things. it's very important to a lot of people to see it with their own eyes. >> you're very welcome. >> jesse: coming up, a liberal woman says she's sick and tired of dating liberal men. ♪ i was told my small business wouldn't qualify for an erc tax refund. you should get a second opinion from innovation refunds at no upfront cost. sometimes you need a second opinion. [coughs] good to go. yeah, i think i'll get a second opinion. all these walls gotta go! ah ah ah! i'd love a second opinion. no. i'm going to get a second opinion.
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♪ >> jesse: dating's hard. >> i apologize to you if i don't seem real eager for jump into a forced awkward i be mate situation that people like to call dating. i don't like the feeling. you're sitting there wondering do i have food on my face, am i talking too much, are they talking enough, do i play i'm interested, i might be interested but now she's not
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interested so causes i'm starting to get interested. >> jesse: it's even harder when you inject politics. conservative men tend to be more traditional maybe a little bit more shiver rus. follow me. liberal men on the other hand can be a little more feminine and that can be a turnoff for women. liberal women want a panel man and a manly man but they're realizing that's hard to come by. >> as a liberal woman it's hard to find a willing to play the more traditional masculine role in the relationship in today's day and age who is not conservative. a man who wants to pay on the first date, who wants to op the door, who has that want and desire to take care of you and provide who is not a conservative. so i don't really know what to do because i don't want to compromise my morals and values just to find a man, but am i asking to have my cake and eat
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it too. >> the woman behind that video petra mcgillis a woman looking for love. she joins me now. what happened on this date with this liberal guy that you just said, oh, my gosh, i can't do this anymore? >> okay. so, jesse, first of all thank you so much for having me on. it was actually a date with a conservative guy who i just went out with a few nights prior and he ended up making it a very strong point that he took his role as a man in the relationship to be the provider, to really show up for his wife or his girlfriend in a way that is very masculine and he really wanted to take care of her and do all of the manly duties in the home. and he, you know, advocated for a very nuclear traditional family. so that's where that tik tok came from. and tik tok for me, they're just my thoughts on the fly coming
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out that i decide to share with the world foolishly, may i add. but, yeah, that's where that tik tok came from. >> jesse: so are these liberal guys that you're dating, they're asking you to split dinner? like what's going on? >> they're -- okay. so both sides, i would have to say, conservative and liberal men i've been asked to split the bill more than once. too many times to count might i add. >> jesse: wow. >> yeah, it's really frustrating because, although i am liberal, there is still that traditional kind of masculine role that i'm looking for in a guy and i would say showing up on the first date as a man and paying is something that the majority of women are looking for regardless of your political motivation. >> jesse: what else are you looking for that liberal men are not providing in the dating world? >> like you said, liberal men in some scenarios, from my personal experience, have been more a fem
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nate. for a guy to show up, be loving and respectful both liberal and conservative men i've dated have done this but that's mainly what i'm looking for is just that respect, that love and that care and i think the majority of women can join me on that. >> jesse: i think you're right. these men that are acting liberal, i mean acting feminine, are they crying? >> ha ha. no, of course not. no. they're not crying. i would say what we see as feminine or what we consider feminine is a guy who's maybe more in touch with his feelings or who's more -- he has an ability to be vulnerable. and that is to be respected, of course. >> jesse: well, you know what, i blame you petro. you women have been saying men need to be open about their emotions need to be more vulnerable. so these liberal guys are trying to do what you want and now you don't want to date them. so, again, thanks for nothing. ha ha. >> no, not true. not necessarily true, jesse. >> jesse: all right.
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>> we still want to date them trust me. i go for the men who are vulnerable. >> jesse: all right. good luck out there, aim sure you're going to find a great guy perfect combo that you're looking for petra, good luck. >> thanks so much. appreciate it. thank you. >> jesse: up next, what's more important, looks or money? >> what happens if you think a guy is really really hot but he's really really poor. >> that i'm not attracted to. ♪ oh booking.com, ♪ i'm going to somewhere, anywhere. ♪ ♪ a beach house, a treehouse, ♪ ♪ honestly i don't care ♪ find the perfect vacation rental for you booking.com, booking. yeah. tide is busting laundry's biggest myth... that cold water can't clean. cold water, on those stains? ♪ cold water can't clean tough stains? i'd say that myth is busted. turn to cold, with tide.
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the vehicles are all-electric. the feeling is all mercedes. the choice is all yours. when it comes to finding love, apparently looks aren't everything. a new poll finds that when women are looking for a boyfriend, money is more important than appearance. is this true? we asked johnny to find out. what is the most important factor that you look or in a guy? >> no psychological, no craziness. >> someone that has a sense of humor.
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>> a habibullah. >> masculinity. seriously it's like you are photoshopped. a new scientific study has women saying financial health is the most important thing. >> what does that mean, financial health? >> definitely plays a roll, definitely. >> you are getting amazingly wrong information. >> his money more important than looks? >> no. >> money health. >> he's got to turn me on. >> do i make you, baby. >> what happens if you think a guy is really hot, but he's really poor? >> that i am not attracted to. i could be a sugar mama for a little bit. >> he might be poor but might have great ideas to make money. >> then why is he poor? >> probably give him a chance. >> no fancy dinners. you are going to mcdonalds.
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>> smile, you are at mr. smiley is. >> another guy who is really rich is your guy? >> i guess so. >> he is my man. >> i don't date no ugly men. i can't be like. >> i just can't do it. you could be jeff bezos or whatever. >> absolutely not. >> no dates? he is single. >> no. >> does money make a guy better looking? >> sometimes. >> you can do stuff your face, right? >> absolutely, botox. >> talk to me about the riches guy you ever dated? >> i don't think i ever dated a rich guy. >> i am sorry. >> i don't eat meat but i didn't want to tell him that. >> so you ate meat? >> i did. >> talk to me about the pores guy you ever dated? >> i don't date poor men. >> i never dated no poor guy. hold up.
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no, no. >> what is this? don't bother me with a question like that. >> any advice for men? >> don't sign your name on the birth certificate if it's not yours. she will him you up for life. she will him you up for college. >> you are going to be on jesse watters prime time. do you know who she is? >> he is a big star. >> i look forward to meeting you. >> where are you meeting him? >> disney world. >> what is up? how are you doing? thank you. do like baldheaded women? i'm just playing, jesse watters. thanks we had a blast today with the governor. frank and anthony are great hosts. the pizza was amazing. i don't like how my legs looked in this picture. they are too close together.
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it wasn't my fault. i was getting squeezed. i look like a liberal man that petra doesn't want to be interested in. also i will be off next week for holiday. i will see you guys later. let's due texts. rich from englewood ohio. who paid for the pizza? is that a campaign expense? i am waters and this is my world. good evening america. welcome to "fox news tonight". i am lawrence jones. after nearly five decades the supreme court today ruled 6-3 to end affirmative action in college admissions. races and skilled color can no longer be used as a factor when admitting students. as justice roberts noted in his opinion eliminating racial discrimination means elimination of all of it. most americans and those who believe america should be a meritocrac

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