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tv   The Five  FOX News  July 6, 2023 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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now, spend it on security and that will do a lot better. >> charles: great stuff. morgan, thank you. thanks for joining. just spoke with ken fisher. tomorrow is absolutely huge, we get the jobs report. estimates through the roof because we had an alternate report. a big number doesn't have to necessarily be bad for the markets. watch me tomorrow at 2:00 p.m. eastern, i will set you straight. here "the five." ♪ ♪ >> greg: greg gutfeld, judge jeanine pirro, jessica tarlov, katie pavlich. "the five." ♪ ♪ its the seventh grandchild that president biden refuses to face, and that makes him a total disgrace. the white house coldly shutting down questions about hunter's a strange 4-year-old daughter. >> there was a story in "the new york times" over the weekend about hunter biden's
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daughter in arkansas. does the president acknowledge this as his granddaughter? >> i don't have anything to share. >> greg: cold. that damning "new york times" article, told how aids are told to flatly ignore hunter's daughter. quote, have been told the bidens have six and not seven grandchildren, including two people familiar with the discussions. i wonder which mind dog faced phony soldier they got that f from. >> the best part of it all, i have six grandchildren, and i am crazy about them. and i speak to them every single day. not a joke. as a matter of fact, just going through the calls, and guess what, they are crazy about me because i pay so much attention to them. >> greg: that is heartbreaking when you hear that contrast. katie, i have noticed a pattern among the bidens, that is not my laptop, that is not my gun, that is not michael caine, that is not my child. is it any wonder that half the country says that is not my
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president? >> katie: [laughs] i guess not. [laughter] first, okay, "the new york times" printed this so all of a sudden there is a story. it has been a story for four years. and now being asked about it directly at the white house. this is something people have known about that has been reported on and it was called a conspiracy theory, and now, all of a sudden, after many court cases and being served multiple times, they are having to address it by saying we are not going to talk about the seventh grandchild. and it is not just joe biden who refuses to acknowledge it. jill biden i would say is just as bad because when she decorate the white house for christmas she only hangs six stockings, which is just absolutely abhorrent and it is just not true when he says he has six grandchildren, he doesn't, he has seven of them. he ran on being mr. empathy, mr. family. clearly that is not true. the problem with this for them is it brings the consequences of hunter's bad behavior into a reality, and that's what they
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don't like. they think they can bury the laptop because the media did it for them, they think they cannot talk about hunters behavior from the white house podium because he is a private citizen, but when it comes to having an actual human child there, it's very clear that hunters behavior has caught up to him, and when you don't want your child to have your last name, it's pretty disgusting. >> greg: i can imagine, i don't know this, i believe joe biden claims he is pro-life, right? >> katie: kind of, he is like half pregnant. >> greg: my point being, i'm sure, you know, he would be happier if that child didn't exist. certainly acts that way. yeah. >> jessica: i don't think so. i think that this is a moment where the president really could have told his son enough's enough, like, i'm happy to deal with all this other stuff, i'll take it, about the business dealings, the addiction, the videos, whatever, we can handle
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this, but this is humanity, right, this is the face of it. and i found the article to be very difficult to read, frankly, and the fact that she knows who she is made it so much worse. you know, there are a lot of people floating around who don't know who their family is, they don't who their dad is or they were put up, left somewhere, and they ended up with wonderful people who took care of them, but this is someone who is proud of the fact that her grandfather is the president of the united states, and doesn't get acknowledged, and frankly, the american people would care or 0% about this. right? oh, he has seven grandkids. hunter's left with this woman. and i was trying to figure out throughout the story, what is the problem with this family? they are trump supporters, big deal. if you're willing to accept someone who was an addict like that and made such terrible choices, like, it is so bad that they vote for the other guy? and i don't think it is something that will change
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boats, necessarily, but it is just an ugliness that doesn't need to be there. >> greg: it does feel, judge, in a way, like a class thing. the fact, oh, she is the daughter's mother is -- let's just say, a dancer. right? >> jeanine: but the mother, it is very interesting, the mother in this case is a college graduate. she played basketball, i think, was it at arizona state university? this is a woman who is a very bright woman and she apparently worked for hunter's company. and, you know, we are not talking about someone, you know, who is an embarrassment. look at it this way. her family can say, you know what, we love america, you know, we don't want to be associated with the bidens. they are corrupt, they collect money from other countries, the economy is a mess. but they don't. they are desperate to have this child named after the bidens. what father, what family would be so insistent that this child
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not have the biden last name? to me, that is cruel. and when this little girl grows up and she starts to understand that what she may even beginning to understand now because she knows her grandfather is the president, she knows who her father is, you know, she is going to have a lot of issues, emotional issues, that the bidens, who are allegedly family-centered and their family lives around their grandchildren according to "the new york times," they are not what they want you to believe. not only had six stockings for the grandchildren, they had a christmas stocking for the dog. these are really classless people, and america understands, america would accept this. they wouldn't just accept it, a lot of families have this problem, where there is an extramarital affair and a child is born, and out of wedlock child, two single people have a child, they don't know about it until five months later, there is a lot of this going on. it is not an embarrassment. >> greg: charlie, i think the
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biggest lie we were told about biden was he was and empathize her, but i get the feeling that that -- it was about this deep, he could feel your pain but he won't do anything about it and this is perfect example of it. >> charlie: yeah, his entire campaign in 2020 was about being empathetic, being decent, he was going to restore normalcy to washington, and obviously has failed on every front of that. but what is sort of interesting, he has been bobbing around washington for so long, most people in washington already knew this side of him. they knew he was a liar. they knew he made things up, would just talk about anything, he would say anything that helped him at any given moment. when he talked about his family, people in washington also kind of knew that he was less of a family man and more just willing to explain his family when it served to benefit him.
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if you remember in 2016, basically after president obama decided to support hillary clinton, which foreclosed biden's ability to run in 2016, he blamed his decision to not run on the death of his son. and then, of course, he has exploited the biography of his first wife, who died 50 years ago, with his daughter. and in that accident, both of his sons were injured. he, of course, has taken that story and twisted it around to talk about how the driver of the truck was somehow drunk, which is completely full. the accident was caused when she pulled out in front of a drunk k driver who was just driving. that callous willingness to exploit even your family and then turn around, who is embarrassing here? the family or the bidens? as you pointed out. but to them, if he sees it as a
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political advantage, he has no problem. >> jessica: i don't think the american public writ large thinks that about joe biden or the bidens -- go >> jeanine: talking about washington. >> jessica: well, it matters who elect them, right? fine. but this really is a story about a father that will not put limits on their son, right? this is one hunter biden said i don't want this child around, and so, his dad said that is fine. >> greg: he didn't have to put limits on it because they have a biden name. that is the gross part about it, not just the relationship between the data have a son, it is how they basically use their power to make sure they are impervious to the law, think of all of the people going through hell because of january 6th. this guy has the sweetest sweetheart deal. if they find the coke, if they find out that coke is his, do they still have that deal? good question, right? >> charlie: anyone else -- >> jessica: january 6th people did a bad thing. >> greg: this guy has got, you
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know, a mount in this high of bad things, and he will keep doing it because there is no disincentives, can just keep going. i am jealous. all right, coming up, confront the thieves and get put on leave. a worker hung out to dry after busting some laundry detergent crooks. ♪ ♪
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oh yeah, that is them. (that is howard) yeah, that's on howard's campus. ohhh, she's so powerful, she carried on the family legacy. we were blown away. (chuckles) i not only was a student and an undergrad, but i've been a professor there for twenty years, so it's really a special moment to know that i had a family member who over a hundred years prior have walk these grounds.
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it's deeply uplifting. yes, it is. we're walking in their footsteps.
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- [narrator] wounded warrior project helped me find the strength to go further than i ever thought possible. - [narrator] i was able to come outta my shell and really connect with others. - [narrator] so i can feel like part of a team,
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part of the community again. - [narrator] it's possible to live better. - [narrator] it's possible to have a voice and to be heard. - [narrator] to feel understood. - [narrator] to find peace. - because i've experienced firsthand that anything is possible. (inspirational music) ♪ ♪ >> katie: more proof that no good deed goes unpunished. a colorado supermarket employee i'm still been let go from his job after reporting three men stealing $500 worth of laundry detergent. speak a look at them stealing. really, bro? you've got to resort to this? the economy is not that bad. better get it while the getting is good. >> katie: the worker claims he
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did not physically touch the laundry looters in any way. two of the crooks got away clean but one has since been arrested and that is thanks to him after he revealed their license plate that was hidden behind tinfoil, and yet he was still fired since the supermarket bans employees from chasing thieves. the grocery store telling a local station "we have security measures in place to help prevent crime and de-escalate such to minimize risk to our associates. while we are unable to comment on personnel matters, we value our hardworking associates and their safe return home." judge, companies have these policies because they don't want the liability if someone gets hurt in this situation, but law enforcement needs video evidence to prove who is doing the crime, right? so how are you supposed to do that if you can't take video? >> jeanine: i guess it all comes down to the policy -- and this is apparently, this market is part of kroger's, the policy as they do not chase thieves or intervene in a theft. i think you should sue for his
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job -- and by the way, i am hosting jesse tonight and we are going to have this guy who is fired on the show tonight, and the truth is that he did the business community a favor, he did the law enforcement community a favor. he had the right, in fact, under the law in colorado to make a citizen's arrest, so he could have done all of that purely doesn't seem he contravenes the policy. i mean, they are punishing him. we are living in an upside down world where if you work for lululemon, i mean, they end up firing you, if you even say something to people taking things. you are supposed to let them leave. to what end? it makes no sense. i think that this guy not only has a job -- by the way, these people can be prosecuted, a misdemeanor, 120 days in jail and $500 fine. >> katie: greg, it seems like they should have stolen more. >> greg: yes, i am actually having the looters on my show
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tonight. you know it is funny? the other obvious film know my point is if he had not filmed it, we never would have seen it. it is important to actually witness these things happening in this era so we can tell people this is not normal, this happens, blah, blah, blah. during the soho looting, my wife climbed out onto the scaffolding and recorded the looters, got the cars and everything, and she did it and gave it all to the cops. you are basically trying to save your neighborhood when you are doing this, and i think legal reasons, you have to do this. there is a weird thing where we laud people for filming so many things, fighting in an airport, yelling at a burger king. in this case, it is not entertainment. all of that stuff is entertainment, it is fine, but if it actually has some kind of moral value, you can get in trouble for it.
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the bottom line, you have to intervene when no one else is doing anything. we see this on the subway, that is how human beings react. we see a vacancy and we want to fill it. if the police can't do it or security can't do it, you will do it. which leads me to a suggestion. this is a solution that could end this right now. when you think about it, decriminalizing theft, right? that means stealing from them is also decriminalized, so i don't understand why if you have a supermarket or any kind of store, you have these guys that just hang out and they wait for people to leave and then they take their stuff and get like 10%. >> charlie: get a posse. >> greg: basically a product posse. they hang out, let's say they take $500 worth of stuff, $50 if they take the stuff from them. it actually sounds like a lot of fun for kids, for a summer job, hang out, you know, -- >> charlie: so many people beaten up. >> greg: if i get one person beaten up, charlie, i have done
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my job. i guess what i'm telling you, if this is legal, why can't taking that stuff away from that be legal? >> katie: go steal it back? >> greg: yes. >> katie: it is true, if you are an hourly worker trying to make an hourly living, i've seen this happen in new york city, people come in and steal every day, what is the point? >> charlie: actually love that idea. you want people to kind of know what they were doing. you want armed people to do it. >> greg: not my idea, but -- >> charlie: but it is amazing that you have all of this concern about liability, where it sorts of cuts against the employees, what about the liability for the employees? the legal term is attractive nuisance, by having a store that doesn't enforce shoplifting, doesn't enforce this kind of theft. aren't you endangering your employees? and why can't employees get together, and i would think -- i think it is a constitutional right you have, even if you're
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at work, to be able to be safe in your environment, to be able to protect yourself. >> jeanine: defend yourself. you have that right to do it, but does that include stopping other people? of course not. >> charlie: think about the people who a have to close doors down at the end of the day. >> katie: i was going to bring that up, a new york city or other places around the country where things are locked up, going shopping as a member of the community sucks. you are going to order on am amazon, every you are not going to ask every time you want to gt out of the store. >> jessica: it makes people not care about where they live. i'm not saying we all have to participate in co-ops and things like that but you are invested in your community, right? that is why you buy homes there. however it is you are living there, you want your kids to be walking safely around the streets, even if it is a chain, like somewhere where you are safe, and also have a decent shopping experience. i went to my local cvs to get
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some ice cream because they have the anti-american stuff i like, the ben & jerry's. and it is locked up now. it is a new development. >> jeanine: throw away the k key. >> jessica: i said, why the ice cream, right? is embarrassing, after call you every day i need another pint. it is so hot out. what are people doing with ice cream, you are stealing a ton of ice cream and it will be melted by the corner. >> greg: policy meet consequent this, jessica. it is the things you believe in that has brought you to this moment in life where you are crying about your ice cream! >> jessica: first world problems, but tide pods are also locked up beer i'm just saying nothing is fun anymore. >> greg: that's true. >> jessica: i think there is a bit of a turning point coming out. the philadelphia d.a., krasner, was apoplectic and so distraught over this shooting in philly over the weekend. i think you see these changes with -- >> jeanine: who did he blame it on? who did larry krasner blame the
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shooting on? not the shooters. on the people wearing pins. i mean, the guy is clueless. as a d.a. that is the end of it. >> jessica: well, it's not, i can still finish what i had to say. the point is i think there is becoming a slow acknowledgment among some of these liberal politicians that you will not lose favor or support, you will in fact gain it if you call things out that are going on, like for london breed, d.a. krasner, we saw in san francisco -- >> greg: isn't that sad that that is how you measure it? >> jeanine: you have to -- >> greg: now we will do it because i think we won't get criticized. you should be doing it because that is the way you are willing to save your community and not just because it is a popular thing for you crazy progressive communists. >> jessica: the -- >> katie: the judge will have them on the show tonight. watch that vehicle coming up, not so fast, watching president biden trying to take
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♪ ♪ >> jeanine: crime-ridden blue states are feeling the blues, while red state economies go boom. for the first time, republican-led florida, texas, georgia, the carolinas, and tennessee are now contribute more to the national gdp than the northeast. it is being called a $100 billion wealth migration. millions of folks are flocking to the greener pastures of southern cities. enticed by the business and tax-friendly environment. but guess who wants the credit?
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president biden, red state south carolina to talk about his bogus bite and now makes a jenna >> here about the deficit? i cut the deficit, $1.7 trillion in two years. nobody has ever done that, cut the debt 1.7. we do more to help red american than blue america. that's okay with me because ruweare all americans. wherever the need is most, that is the place we should be helping. i am not here to declare victory on the economy. i am here to say we have a plan that is turning things around quickly. >> jeanine: quickly. okay. katie, do you agree with that? [laughter] >> katie: first off, he is in south carolina for political reasons ahead of the election but south carolina is a right to work state, nonunionized, that is why they have attracted more.
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bragging about somehow the economy -- pretty laughable. when you look at the way states have flourished, opened up during covid, georgia was first, florida, you have a number of other red states getting out of bed early versus california where they are leaving in droves, most in the country in new york. when it comes to reality, the bills he talks about with the inflation reduction act, the chips act, for example, all of the money we have spent on the construction project and i'm supposed to been in those bills has been wiped out as a result of democratic spending. it is because of red state policies opening up electrical equipment and also not engaging in unionized labor.
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>> jeanine: 52% of americans believe they are drowning in debt since he took office. how can this man possibly go out there and say, you know, making a difference in your life? >> charlie: shamelessness is the greatest virtue of any politician. if you go out there and stay sah a straight face whatever else thinks is nuts, you have a leg up in politics. it is sort of interesting. it is hard to get a 55/45 breaking poles on things in this country. elections come down to 50/50, a 60/40 break or 60 less than 40 break on the economy tells you a lot about how much people are hurt. even something like gas prices. gas prices have come down from the really, really high highs.
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while that is true, they have come down from those highs, it is still higher and people are still paying for it. that is why inflation is absolutely destroying people's checkbooks at home so he can lie about it all he wants to put people at home know it, including a lot of democrats and independents who voted for him. >> jeanine: you know, jessica, $100 billion wealth migration, tilts the unit u.s. economy to the south, and there is no evidence, i thought this was interesting, that reproductive rights, chipping away at the influx of people moving south. i thought that was unusual. >> jessica: it isn't unusual. we will see how this plays out over time. i do know it is a factor in decisions about where people will go to school, where young people are applying to colleges. but i think it is wonderful that there are new boom towns and boom states and i think that should be celebrated. i also think it would be great if there are these southern
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republican-controlled states that start paying their fair share and take care of alabama, mississippi, arkansas, and kentucky, because i am sitting at taking care of them from up here in new york or california because blue states pay the highest taxes and then those federal dollars gets shipped down south to make sure that they have decent schools, they have health care, they have good roads, et cetera, so by all means, south carolina, nancy mace, who wants to take credit for things she voted against, please give some money to kentucky, help them out, tommy tuberville, talk about you all the time. you should be paying more, and taking care of your own people, instead of feeding off of democrats that pay higher taxes. >> greg: please, leaders of other states, just completely, you know, so your taxpayers the way we have sold ours. >> jessica: why should we pay for them? >> greg: that's not the argument. the point is, we are getting --
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i, as a new yorker, this is astounding. we pay the most, may be california pays more, it is ridiculous, and we get nothing out of it, so i think what you are talking about, it is a ridiculous point, and i don't have an answer for it. >> jessica: that actually happens more than you would like to admit. >> greg: i want to talk about the migration thing. this is the triumph of something i call federalism. states experimenting and competing with each other, right, what other states, some do it one way, some another, this is why we won't have a civil war, because people have choice to move wherever they want to go and if one state speaks to you in a different way, that's a great way of doing it. that is how the roe vs. wade reversal is so easy to explain to people who get so upset about it. it was taking the decision away from me, the judge, and giving it to you, the person. that is all it is about, and that is what states are all about. the decisions are closer to you than they are to the government.
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and so perhaps a state with abortion on demand might flourish on the state with more restrictions won't, that is federalism, you fight with your feet and not with your guns. and state rights guarantee that. >> charlie: one of the problems with this migration, people worry that voters are going to vote the same way, when they moved to these red states. another concern is the fact that they are deadbeat voters. they voted for all of this nonsense in the state they left, and then they leave and they don't get stuck with the bill. >> greg: they shouldn't be allowed to vote. >> charlie: they shouldn't be allowed to vote until they have paid back all of the taxes they voted for in california or new york. >> katie: all of the taxpayers in new york and california are leaving. not going to have a tax base in new york. >> charlie: but many of them voted for the taxes. >> jeanine: the gloves are off in the battle of the billionaires. mark zuckerberg takes on elon musk with his rival twitter
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♪ ♪ >> jessica: forget about that bailing her cage match. the real fight between mark zuckerberg and elon musk is happening online. twitter now threatening to sue meta over its brand-new "twitter killer" app called threads, 30 million joint and just the first few days. here is the zuck. >> we are launching threads, an open and friendly public space for conversations. i'm looking forward to the fun journey ahead to turn this into the kind of big and friendly community that i think we all want to see in the world. >> jessica: elon musk is clapping back, "competition is fine, cheating is not."
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judge, i will come to you. >> jeanine: yeah. >> jessica: you just say whatever. [laughter] >> jeanine: there was a cease and desist letter that was sent today to mark zuckerberg from elon musk's people, basically saying that meta, through threads, has engaged in systematic, willful, and unlawful misappropriation of trade secrets. now, what is interesting about this is apparently everything that has happened in this, you have instagram that copied stories from snapchat. and then instagram created reels, a mimic of tiktok and now tiktok has stories, and they all take from each other. by this point elon musk is saying those people i fired, you are hiring them and you are literally copying and taking some of the trade secrets, and threads is nothing more than twitter with a new name. >> jessica: katie, what do you make of that? i don't have an instagram
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account so i can get a threads account which i think is silly, if you get more sign-ups, if that is not one of the restrictions, it does have a different word count, right, but it doesn't have hashtags, which is the main search engine for twitter, and that seems like something that would be really similar if this was true, if it was just a carbon copy. >> katie: well, there are a lot of people who left twitter when elon musk took over who are now working as engineers for this new threads service for zuckerberg. i bet a lot of people in silicon valley would argue zuck tends to take things that are not his. he was accused of taking facebook, they got that out in court, not doing that. myspace was a thing, then facebook came along, and it is interesting to watch how fast tech moves and how quickly people's attention span dies out and they move onto the next thing or not. if you build an audience on twitter of millions of followers, you don't necessarily
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want to go start over on threads. you might see it as another way to reach more people, but at some point there are lots of different platforms to choose from to get your message out and it might become too saturated with places to see the same thing, essentially. >> jessica: greg, do you think that this will impact whatever the fate of the lawsuit is, we will see how that plays out, but twitter doing some hard thinking about the changes to the app that they have made? >> greg: first up, i had to share a floor with myspace when we bought them on the 13th floor. they were horrible people. they put post-it notes on their food in the fridge, please don't eat this, so we purposely ate stuff -- >> jeanine: of course you did. >> greg: and we would smoke cigarettes in their office -- >> jessica: in the fridge? >> katie: that is why they the post-it. >> greg: what kind of impact? we don't need another twitter, right? so i am assuming this is all something else. this is a race for the ai
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interface, right? once you get the artificial intelligence interface, all of the apps go away, so you don't need amazon or paypal or twitter or youtube. it is one relationship. it is one relationship, your little best friend, and he is going to predict everything you need in life and you are never going to use your brain, it is going to be amazing. it is going to handle language and mathematics and directions, in case you are lost, and i think what is happening is you are seeing two of the richest people going in that direction, and this is where i can link it to why wokeism failed. >> jessica: thank god, i was wondering when we would get to the good stuff. >> greg: if everything is based on prediction, especially language, this is why the whole pronoun thing fell apart, because if you look at a man and he says "i'm a she," it doesn't work. that just imploded and fell apart. that is my theory, anyway, why wokeism -- because it does not follow a predictive pattern. you can quote me on that if you like. >> katie: do you remember your math teacher saying it is not
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like you are always going to have a cultivator with you? >> jessica: yes! >> greg: who's laughing now? not them. >> charlie: i just want to know why you would want threads and not instagram. i mean come instagram is at least fun. >> jessica: but you still have instagram, you just also -- >> charlie: you personally. >> jessica: oh, me. i only got twitter even when i started working here because sean hannity told me i would miss out on all of the fun and knowing what is going on and i found it to be the greatest news source but more difficult now. via social media like that i would spend 28 hours a day looking at everyone's old pictures, being like, oh, what is that guy doing that i went on one date with in 20 -- >> greg: typical check. >> jeanine: don't even go there. >> jessica: it's fine, i can take it. >> greg: 24 hours a day, jessica. >> jessica: that's why, made my point more. >> greg: really? >> jessica: coming up, the idiot tourist who defaced the
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roman colosseum giving a jaw-dropping explanation on why he did it. ♪ ♪ hi, i'm stacey, and i've lost 60 pounds on golo. (guitar music) i decided to try golo when i had an international flight coming up, and i realized i couldn't fly being the size that i was. my sister-in-law tried golo and had lost 50 pounds, so i thought i'd give golo a try. i didn't expect the results i got on golo. i was hopeful, but i did not expect it to be like this. golo just makes sense. this plan works. (announcer) change your life at golo.com. that's golo.com.
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♪ ♪ >> charlie: welcome back. remember this idiot tourist?
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you know, the guy who thought it would be a great idea to carve his and his girlfriend names into the wall of rome's 2,000 year old ancient coliseum. turns out he is a 27-year-old british fitness instructor who wrote an apology level to rome's mayor come and get this, clams that he had no clue how old the ancient building was before defacing it. you know, when i first read this story, i was terrified because i thought it was going to be an american tourist -- >> jeanine: me too. >> charlie: going to be globally embarrassing. not that this is any better, really, just a little less for us. if this guy came before your court, what would you do? >> jeanine: i hate cases like this. somebody decided they were going to paint a stop sign, i would make them clean the stop sign and clean every stop sign in the town, okay, so this guy, let me just say about him, part of generation z, i think, so he
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either never went to school if you never heard of the colosseum, or he is lying. what did he think it was, a landfill? he is in rome, it is the colosseum, you have to go in there. >> charlie: did he not listen to the tour guide? >> jessica: out of place. even if you think it is not 2,000 years, people care about this thing that i am writing on. >> charlie: greg, knowing your blood lust, what if we put liens back in the colosseum? >> greg: i think this man is a hero. we are now on day three of doing this story and as you know in the summertime, there are no stories. so we have been able to do three bites out of this apple, this little guy, who wasn't doing really anything wrong other than writing on something that has been around forever. by the way, if this coliseum or in minneapolis or seattle or portland, it would have been
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destroyed already or it would have been overrun by the homeless camping in it, so, i mean, we have no right to condemn this guy when we spent two years tearing down statues with no retribution. >> charlie: thank you. exactly. you wish to respond? >> greg: in your face, jessica! statue destroyer. >> jessica: don't want to have the robert e. lee conversation again. >> greg: who is robert e. lee? >> katie: this guy's biggest mistake is he carved a woman he is not married to -- >> jessica: sometimes they split up. >> katie: that is bad news. girlfriend, really? the colosseum? >> jessica: i like how paris does the locks on the bridge. that if such an easy love declaration thing. and it is impermanent. >> greg: what happened to paris come anyway? that story went away. it was in flames and now -- >> jessica: they handled their business.
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>> charlie: sorry, got to go. "one more thing" is up next. >> greg: it's true. ♪ ♪ living with diabetes? glucerna protein smart has your number with 30 grams of protein. scientifically designed with carbsteady to help you manage your blood sugar. and more protein to keep you moving with diabetes. glucerna live every moment many holocaust survivors are impoverished and suffering today in their final years. at this holocaust museum in israel,
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you see the names; the faces, of jews that were brutally murdered. this great cloud of witnesses cries out to us "comfort, comfort my people." we're in a race against time to reach every holocaust survivor in israel and the former soviet union. many are poor and hungry and they have nowhere to turn. naroj has had such a hard life from the day that she was born into the holocaust. we were so hungry that we would go with my mother and find the leaves and grass nd we would pick them up and eat it. still today, she's suffering with no one there to help her. dare we turn our back on her now? for $25 you can rush a food box to a holocaust survivor or an elderly jew.
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the international fellowship of christians and jews brings them urgently needed food and comfort in their final years. let's do what we know god has called us to do. call the number on your screen now and help save jewish lives. no organization helps holocaust survivors and the elderly jewish people as much as they do. valeria is saying that, she didn't receive love her whole life. you seem so full of love, and not of hate. just $25 helps to rush a food box to a holocaust survivor. i hope you'll join me at the international fellowship of christians and jews. we can do something to relieve their suffering. please, do something now.
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>> time for one more thing. >> the all-american summer concert series be continues tomorrow with gavin degraw. for tickets, register now at thoughts and friends. the music starts at eight. check out districts shot. it may have been unintentional but she hit the tea into her back pocket while training for the u.s. women's open. >> women are showing up and all sorts of places.
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tonight, katie, brett, 2 inches. i am rolling with the edges. it is going to be a great show. how many nuts? we have to roll it and then stop it. there we go. how many nuts is this fellow going to stuff in his face? >> 11. >> eight. >> all of them. >> no, number. >> i will say 12. >> ten. >> one. five. seven. eight. nine. ten. 11. >> here we go.
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charlie, you guessed the right amount. >> he is a farm guide. >> what did you win? >> yes, we want to know. >> you don't want to know. >> i am hosting jesse watters prime time tonight. we will have the individual from colorado, the supermarket employee fired for recording three men stealing from the supermarket. i will tell you about a brother and sister duo catching a lot of attention. they have never taken a dance lesson yet their chemistry is unbelievable. entertainment organizers have reached out and requested the duo perform at events.
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>> very cool. >> season two of luxury hunting lodges of america will be available july 10th. please go watch on fox nation. >> you have ten seconds, cha charlie. >> he has a pet alligator. >> that was wonderful. that is it for us. "special report" is up next. >> welcome to washington. we are following to breaking stories. the cocaine found inside the white house sunday was discovered in a cubby near the white house executive entrance, a place near the situation room, not traffic by tours but high-level officials.

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