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tv   Jesse Watters Primetime  FOX News  July 18, 2023 5:00pm-6:00pm PDT

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making news on the show tonight. >> you'll get the sponsorship. hang in there. >> any moment now. jimmy, we like having you on either at 7:00 or 10:00. the thank you. >> you're the best, laura. >> jimmy is on the road. check him out everywhere he is. and remember, that's it for us. it's america now and forever. watters takes it from him. >> welcome to "jesse watters primetime." tonight -- >> where did the white house cocaine go? now we know. >> joe biden ordered his top political opponent to be arrested. that's me. >> donald trump arrested. again?
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>> country music. black lives matter. is this a threat? welcome to the future. >> yes, yes, yes. >> in life you got to play it cool. don't let the nerves get to you. >> have you heard anything about the missing equipment? >> no, not a thing. >> you know, george, there's nothing i hate more than a liar. >> well, but no room for someone like that in this organization. >> ha-ha-ha. >> are you feeling all right, george? >> fine. >> you look a little warm. >> it's the chicken. >> you're a terrible liar, george. you're a wreck. you're swatting bullets. >> it's the kung pao. >> if sweating bullets makes you look suspicious, then blowing up evidence makes you look guilty. the biden white house just blew
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up the bag of cocaine. >> they destroyed the dna evidence, because apparently when they went in and got the bag they treated it as a biological entity and for some reason detroit it because, you know, to me it just seems like they would go in there with the hazmat suits on, put it in a protective bag, take it to a lab for analysis, but instead apparently they blew the thing up. it just a complete joke and a nightmare. >> yes. so the secret service destroyed the evidence. they didn't put it in the evidence locker. they didn't send it to quantico for additional testing. they incinerated it. is that proper criminal procedure? is how that how you handle evidence? jimmy, we just seized it from the back of a truck. the da doesn't want to bring charges so let's light it on fire. that's some chain of custody going on over at the white house. the only way to prove whose ocoke it was if hunter
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confesses. let's just test this bag for prints. oops. where did that fire come from? is this why we only have a 500-person suspect list? without physical evidence every single person in the white house is a suspect. all 500 of them. i'm pretty sure police don't blow up evidence when they close a case. that's called a cold case. i didn't go to law school, but i think police try to preserve evidence. at least that's what they do when i watch "law and order." everything i know about criminal law is that when you destroy evidence you're participating in a cover-up. remember trump crumpled up a document, threw it in the toilet once, and they wanted to put him in prison for life? the cameras had a blind spot also. first the coke was in the library, then the cubby, then outside the situation room, and then back in the cubby.
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oh, hunter wasn't there on friday. actually he was. the key to the cubby is now missing. the coke is missing too. why? they burned it. how dare you think the coke was hunter's. this was a thorough investigation. with the biden administration go through these lengths if this was a random tourist's cocaine? all this to protect a random tourist. this wasn't a tourist. this was probably someone living at the white house. we know recovering addicts living at the white house. >> why would someone take it out of their pocket and leave it somewhere? the answer is, because when you're in that mindset of an addict you want a drop point to sneak in, take a quick hit, leave it there for safekeeping and come back. it was being stored somewhere. >> so the cubby was a stash spot. if there really was a blind spot for cameras like they said, this guy knew about the blind spot. tell me what tourist knows about
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secret blind spots on cubbies outside the situation room. let's talk about the little cubby. you're saying somebody opened up a cubby using a key and there's not a single print on the cubby, not a palm print, not a shred of dna? the secret service is saying someone used latex gloves to put a bag of coke in a white house cubby? did the secret service dust the cubby for prints or blow it up also? you can take a palm print off a cubby. they can lift off palm prints off counterfeit checks. if you stash coke in the cubby, wouldn't you want to put it in a backpack, in a book, maybe a pouch? you're saying someone pulled a coke battie out of their pocket in the middle of the white house and threw it in a cubby and locked it and shut the door? didn't try to hide it at all. was there anything else inside the cubby? if it was a book, pouch or sock,
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that would probably have prints and dna on it. that would probably narrow it down from 500. now, the secret service won't tell us what else was in the locker, though. the irs loses all their emails, the secret service deletes all their january 6th texts. hillary bleaches 33,000 emails. epstein's surveillance cameras break. the pentagon can't find $6 billion in ukraine. the biden bribe tapes missing in europe. now biden's white house cocaine is blown up. pretty easy to beat the law if you're above it. let's bring in james fitzgerald, a retired fbi criminal profiler and a forensic linguist. james, why did they blow the coke up? >> that's a good question. after a conviction, a number of appeals have been filed, all dismissed, then drugs will be destroyed, but i've never heard
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of drugs being destroyed in the middle of an investigation. this is highly unusual. there's no precedence for it as far as i know. >> are you buying the fact they couldn't lift a single print, a single shred of dna from this baggy? >> well, i've certainly been at crime scenes. i've certainly done my best with the evidence teams, evidence response teams, to lift if i lit fingerprints. sometimes you can do it, sometimes you can't. there are sophisticated ways in laboratories, including the quantico lab, where chemicals and lasers and other techniques like that can lift late tent fingerprints or make them visible to the naked would a. they go back to the database and see who they belong to. i'm very much surprised at something as viable as a plastic bag which would usually hold fingerprints and other body fluids, sweat, etc., there's no evidence at all on it.
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i won't say without precedence, but certainly -- >> what about the locker? you're saying the cubby was clean. nothing in the cubby. just a little baggy, and the entire thing was specific and span. do you believe that? >> >> what i believe, what the evidence presents to me, are two different things. i'll say this up front sort of, in the war against drugs in the u.s., when cocaine is found at the headquarters of the supreme allied commander, that is the white house and president biden, we probably lost that war, and that's a probably. who would then take it into the cubby, put it there, i have no idea. it makes no sense. was somebody walking down a hallway and they had to get rid of their stash? how did they get it in there in the first place? why weren't they searched? i think every guest is searched
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by armed guards at the door. metal detectors you have to go through, yet this person got it in and put it in this cubby. why, i don't know. maybe it was there for a midnight treat of some sort when no one else would be around. to this point, we don't know that. i'm thinking the secret service, they're good guys and women, they know what they're doing. they may have restrictions and limitations put on him here. >> they were told to blow the coke up. there's no doubt about that. you investigated the unabomber. i'm sure that had forensics involved. was that any different than the white house cocaine? >> we got inside the cabin of the unabomber on april 3rd of 1986, and had evidence team in there right away, finding all sorts of evidence, including fingerprints on different documents. he was pretty good. he didn't leave fingerprints on the letters or bombs themselves that he sent to people, but we
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certainly had those inside his cabin, because that's not what he was prepared -- you know, he wasn't prepared to hide evidence from there. he didn't know we were coming. how did the person who left the stash in the cubby know to handle it with latex gloves, which i'm just not buying that story. people don't carry latex gloves around with them. >> you were involved in the unabomber case, james? >> the fbi did not blow things up after the fact. there was no reason to. >> thank you very much. >> you're welcome. >> well, it looks like joe biden will have trump arrested. again. the former president got a letter from biden's prosecutors saying he'll be arrested in the next couple of days. over what? january 6th. here's what's behind this. if the united states citizen is convicted of participating in an insurrection or gets convicted of sedition, they're
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disqualified from holding public office. that means not only can trump not be president, he couldn't even get elected dog catcher. can he appeal and still win the presidency? we don't know. nothing like this has happened before. the right now trump is in a dead heat with joe biden. polls have him tied. joe biden's trying to tie his opponent in legal knots a year before the general. trump is due in court on the document case this winter. in the spring, he's going to be in new york to face the campaign finance charges. now with the january 6th case, he's going to be in court all next year. how do you campaign for president, let alone the republican nomination, when you have to be in court for three separate cases in three different jurisdictions? sorry, iowa, got to be in court. sorry, fox news debate, got to be in court. sorry, fat cat fundraiser, again, i got to be in court. that's the biden strategy. stay in your basement, keep your opponent in court.
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here's joe biden nearly falling asleep with the israeli president. >> we join israelis and palestinians together at a political level. >> they want to make trump's prosecutor a celebrity. biden's special counsel jack smith, prosecuting trump for the documents and january 6th ordered lunch today. cnn turned into tmz and turned jack smith into tom cruise. watch. >> turns out even jack smith can't resist a $5-foot long, carding to what we see right there, new and exclusive video of the special counsel at subway. >> he was spotted by cnn going to subway for lunch, picking up a sandwich, leaving and not
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saying a word. >> he stood in line like everybody else. i couldn't tell if it was a foot long or 6 inches. >> you couldn't tell? take a look harder. by the way, it's not a $5 foot long anymore. thanks to inflation, it's a $9. >> jack smith going to subway today is a message to donald trump. donald trump tries to intimidate people, bully people, scare you away. that was jack smith with no words and a simple $5 sub in his hands saying i'm here, not going away. >> the imagery was intentional and smoke volumes. >> they don't send cameras to the border. don't worry, they have subway covered. once again, biden's justice department bigfoots bad news for hunter. tomorrow two irs whistleblowers are set to testify that the biden administration blocked felony charges against hunter. this just in. an fbi whistleblower says right before agents were supposed to
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interview hunter, the fbi tipped off the bidens. then what happened? hunter dodged the interview. interview never happened. let's turn it over to the speaker of the house kevin mccarthy. speaker, what's going on with this looming indictment of donald trump? this would be the second from joe biden's justice department. can the house of representatives do anything about that? >> well, one thing we can do is to continue to put forth showing two different judicial systems in america. i mean, if you're part of biden inc. family you get treated one way. everybody else gets treated differently. every time president trump goes up in the polls they come after him. this is one of the fundamental reasons why when we took the majority we created the weaponization committee, because we are going after this. this is wrong. tomorrow we'll have a special hearing. this hearing is going to bring oversight, judiciary and ways and means together. you are going to see for the first time not the one irs whistleblower but both.
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these are individuals who have worked in here, not from a political basis, but are so upset about this system of justice not being equal for others. you've got to understand for your viewers, why did 20 shell companies get created when joe biden became vice president? why did 16 of the 17 payments from romania go to the biden inc. family and these shell companies while he was still vice president? we need to answer the question. did joe biden go to the four seasons in l.a. for the cfce meeting. all this time when joe biden ran for president, he claimed he had nothing to do, they never got chinese money. >> yeah. >> we've proven time and again this is not true what they're saying. look at the different systems -- >> speaker, a lot of people are losing their patience. investigates and hearings on the one side. on the other side, they're trying to throw president trump in prison. it's kind of -- you know, people are kind of -- they've had it.
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>> we've had it. you have to understand, we are not prosecutors. we don't get to indict. but the one thing we have to do, we have to fight for every bit of information. everything you know today, jesse, is only because we won the house and we have not stopped going after this. >> that's true. >> we will not stop. >> can you defund jack smith's salary? i mean, you were going to defund the salary of chris wray at the fbi. can you do that? >> we want to. we want to bring justice. when you bring the truth to the american public, think of this, the fbi goes and raids mar-a-lago. what do they do to hunter biden? they let the statute of limitations run out. one, he doesn't have to pay taxes and he's not held accountable. the attorneys go and the prosecutors there call hunter's attorneys, tell them where the files are in a storage unit they don't even know so they can
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clean it out before they go, before the inaugural they warned them that they're going to be interviewed. so you know what, he goes gets his attorney so he's not interviewed. time and again, we've shown the american public if you are biden inc. family you are treated different than the rest of america. that will not stand. we will take this every direction we can. >> good. >> if we find at the end of the day that garland lied, i will start impeachment inquiry. >> good. >> this is the attorney general of the united states. if he's lying to congress and the senate, there has to be consequences for those actions. >> any consequences for blowing up the bag of cocaine at the white house? >> think of this for one moment. this is the most secure building, should be in the country. drug-sniffing dogs, cameras everywhere. you go through numerous gates and security before you even get there. for them to say they don't know whose it is or where it's at,
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what else is happening? >> they blew it up, speaker. they lit it on fire and it doesn't exist anymore. >> did someone blow it up? that's the real question. >> no one knows anything. all right. house speaker kevin mccarthy, thank you. >> thank you. >> coming up, a new drug turned philly into the walking dead. and later, what's so offensive about country music? ♪ ♪
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>> if you are in san francisco,
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wanted to buy ice cream at the quickie mart, you have to wait for an attendant, because san francisco is locking up their ice cream. they're not locking anything else up in the city. just ice cream. crooks are stealing so much ice cream that the ice cream is behind bars. you're being punished because now you have to think longer and a little harder before you buy a box of ice cream twix. maybe that's a good ching. philly, or east san francisco, not doing much better. look at kensington. this is the worst neighborhood in philly. a new drug hit the streets, and its deadlier than heroin, called trank. >> it's like an open-air drug market in certain places. there's a cop up there literally just standing beside people exchanging drugs on the street. some guy doing crack.
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what is the cop going to do anything about it? nothing. >> drug czar kamala harris, 2 1/2 years into her job, finally talked about the fentanyl crisis today. her message, sniffing narcotics isn't a choice, it's a disease, and that's why we need universal healthcare. >> we have a long way to go in our country to accurately and appropriately talk about what substance use addiction really is? it's a healthcare issue. we must destigmatize this issue. we must remove judgment from this issue. we must understand that most people don't choose to have a substance abuse disorder. it is not a choice they make, where they can then say no. >> so we went from just say no to drugs to can't say no to drugs. former homeless addict and skid
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row resident jared clinton joins me now. is you were addicted. is that true. you can't say no to drugs? >> jesse, thanks for having me back on. listen, these drugs are getting worse than in prior decades. about a hundred thousand people died from fentanyl last year, more than all the soldiers that died in vietnam. we have to say no. we have to educate on this drug. if people are going to be doing them, we need to offer the help and sort of scoop them up, treat it like a natural disaster, and get fema involved and get them medically detoxed, evaluated, and placed in job training or mental health facilities. >> are you saying these new drugs are so toxic and irresistible that the people that do them just once are unable to say no ever again? >> well, i don't know about once. these drugs are completely debilitating.
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even heroin is somewhat manageable. you can hold a job badly, but these drugs turn you into slaves to it, drugs like fentanyl. we can't hand out free crack pipes and hand out, you know, and let people get wild. >> kamala says we have to destigmatize it. we have to remove judgment. i always judgment was a good thing. a lot of people stay away from stuff because they don't want to be judged. do you think that's effective? >> listen, for me personally, shame was very effective. my family shamed me out of existence. of the it worked eventually. i think we need to destigmatize recovery from addiction, but can't destigmatize this social behavior, smoking fentanyl in front of kids at a park. that's a classless society. >> shame is effective. >> yes.
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>> i spent my whole life being ashamed. it worked. >> me too. >> why do you think someone like kamala wants to remove the shame factor from the equation with drugs? >> listen, i grew up with kamala. she was the da in oakland when i grew up there. she was tough on crime back then. the she got me at 16 for possession of marijuana. she's turn changed her tune. i lost the ability to get my driver's license until i was 18. >> she took away your driver's license for two years. >> yeah. >> kamala harris when she was out in california, and now they're finding bags of coke in the white house, and everyone is saying, oh, my goodness, who cares. >> people evolve, i guess, or devolve, you know. she's certainly changed a lot. >> all right. jared, thank you so much. again, we have a lot of respect for you, what you've gone through, where you are now. we appreciate that. >> thank you so much, jesse.
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>> coming up, welcome to the new world order. but i wonder if you just take a few seconds to pray with me real quick. in the name of the father and son, holy spirit. amen. lord jesus, come to us now. help us to surrender ourselves completely to you. help us to listen to your voice. even when we're distracted or tired, we pray this in the name of the father and of the son of the holy spirit. amen. thank you so much. i just want to encourage you that if you want to join me in more prayer, check out hallow it's the number one prayer app in the world.
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>> what did you want to be when you grew up? an astronaut? police officer? host of "primetime." whatever it was, it was to put bread on the table for you and your family. i'm sure it wasn't this. >> yes, yes, yes! >> a rose? thank you. the a rose? thank you.
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>> welcome to the new age economy, where sitting in front of a computer screen is a $500 billion a year industry. millions of americans don't go to the office anymore. they don't go to the factory. they don't go to work at all. they stay home and they broadcast for cash. not a normal broadcast like this. they stream themselves being weird. strangers pay them to do weird stuff in front of their cameras. they get paid in digital currency. they get tipped in emojis. every time you swallow a virtual donut, you're 10 cents richer. you can make thousands of dollars a week. fake swallowing. fake food. the big tech, they want this to be the future of our economy. after the country is at home on a screen, servicing each other. whatever that means. cashless transactions run by their software on their platforms. the world economic forum
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predicted this. the world economic forum is run by tech companies. here's their vision. you'll own nothing and be happy. everything will be delivered to your home. the they don't want you to own a house, a car or a business. you're a tech slave, strapped to your chair. don't worry. everything you want is delivered. depressed? pharmaceuticals will be delivered. hungry? impossible burgers will be delivered. they're aiming to extract every ounce of value from your soul and every penny from your bank account without you ever leaving the house. they'll make you so comfortable while they enslave you. you won't even raise an eyebrow. yauthor of "you will own nothin" carol roth joins us. you do a chapter about the future economy. what do you mean when they say, you will own nothing? >> first of all, i want to know
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how much i'm getting paid on the show if i swallow a digit donut. i didn't get that from the producer before we started. >> yeah. we'll tip you in donuts. >> i appreciate that. i feel like there's a push to trade out return on investment. roi. for what i call roe, return on ego. you get likes. you get fans. but it doesn't necessarily pay your rent. why do the content-creating companies love that? because they don't produce any content. they make more money. not only that, if everybody is online and dependent on them for their livelihood, they're easier to control. why say nothing out of line when that -- why say something out of line when the livelihood could get stripped from you? the whole concept of you'll own nothing and be happy sounds silly, but it's actually nefarious. >> they don't want to have to pay arcs and actresses to create
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content that's expensive. there's legal hoops you have to jump through. they want you to sit at home, create your own content. doesn't make that much money. it's just enough money to keep you renting a house and paying for internet service? >> yeah. and think about what's happened, you know, to these people along the way. we've had wall street get all kinds of money to compete with you for your house. kids are saddled with debt. so they're a bit demoralized. it's much easier for them to buy in that they're going to be happy creating this consent, even if they're giving up their ownership and rights to it, because they don't really believe in the american dream anymore. that american dream, that symbol, that you look at, is the white house. it is unattainable for many young people. so, you know, if you buy into the kept that you'll be happy, you don't get worried by it, and at the same time it's much easier for those people who are
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jockeying to keep their power and their wealth to do so if you buy into that concept. it's much more peaceful if you think that you're going to be happy, and you don't push back, they don't have to force it upon you. >> no one storms the castle if they're in front of a screen at home, getting food and beverages delivered. is that also the goal? >> 100%. you know, you can go out and you can conquer in war, conquer the wealth of a nation, or you can legally plunder it. it's easier if you buy in, have sort of the bread and circuses. we saw this in the roman empire and it led to its downfall. we're seeing the u.s.' empire get long in the tooth here. we have so much debt. we've weaponized the dollar from the biden administration around the world. the fed hasn't kept the dollar stable here in the u.s., or on the global stage. so, you know, we're getting to that end of the cycle.
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so the more bread and more circuses, keep the people happy, and let's take as much as we can. if we can take more from them peacefully, then it makes it easier for us to prolong this position of power and wealth. >> all right. you will own nothing. carol, thank you so much for coming on "primetime." >> thanks, jesse. congratulations, by the way, on the slot. >> thank you so much. >> so why did this country music song just get canceled? ♪ ♪ wer pod. -see? -baby: ah. i was told my small business wouldn't qualify for an erc tax refund. you should get a second opinion
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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. with innovation refunds, there's no upfront cost to find out. so why not check like i did for my small business? take the first step to see if your small business qualifies for the erc. your wyndham is waiting. whether it's for the bucket lists... the free breakfasts and wifi... or the... romantic getaways? with 24 trusted brands by wyndham to choose from... your wyndham is waiting. get the lowest price at wyndhamhotels.com artificial intelligence. wow! it's something that everybody's talking about. and i think about that, but i think about the one who created all intelligence. almighty god, who created this earth, the universe, created you and me. but what are the problems? why do we see war, and famine, and all of these things? well, it's because of sin.
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the world is infected with sin. and sin separates you from god. but god sent his son, jesus christ, from heaven to this earth to take your sins. and he died and shed his blood on a cross for your sins. and god raised him to life. if you've never invited jesus christ to come into your heart and into your life, you can do that right now. just pray this prayer with me. just say, "god, i'm a sinner." i'm sorry, forgive me. i believe that jesus is your son. i want to trust him as my savior. and i want to follow him as my lord from this day forward, forever. amen. if you prayed that prayer, call the number on the screen.
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>> back in the summer of love, peaceful protesters caused $2 billion worth of damage. rioters blew up america's cities, like the secret service blew up hunter's bag of coke. the kaboom. now they want to act like nothing happened. country music superstar jason aldean remembered what happened in the summer of 2020. he released a song "try that in a small town." watch.
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>> somebody on a sidewalk, carjack old lady at a red light, pull a gun on the owner of a liquor store, you think it's cool, act a fool if you like. cuss out a cop, spit in his face, stomp on the flag and light it up. try that in a small town. >> that new single from jason aldean carries a simple message. small town america doesn't put up with what they put up with in the city. the media won't allow the truth to come out about what happened in the summer of love. it complicates their narrative that right wing violence is a national security threat, so the press has deemed jason aldean's song dangerous, irresponsible, and of course racist. aldean was forced to defend the song. quote, in the past 24 hours i've been accused of releasing a pro-lynching song, a song that's been out since may, and was subject to the comparison that
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i, direct quote, was not too pleased with the nationwide blm protests. "try that in a small town" for me refers to the feeling of a community i had growing up, where we took care of our neighbors regardless of background or belief. all that explanation didn't matter. cmt announced it was pulling the music video from the airwaves. they canceled it. clay travis joins me now. >> what do you see there that tt that's inflammatory, clay? >> jesse, it may upset your mom. i want to preface what i'm about to say with this, look, i'm a born and raised nashville kid. all sorts of things that taylor swift says in her music that i absolutely despise, including much of her politics. she's also really talented.
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i would be happy to go with my wife and watch a taylor swift concert. in fact, i've done it before. jason aldean is saying a pinprick of what left wing musicians and artists are doing on a regular basis. frankly, i think it's disgraceful. i think it's pathetic. i think it's indefensible he's not given the right to say exactly what he thinks when so many people in the world of entertainment -- i just watched, jesse, snow white, you can't have seven dwarfs anymore. only one dwarf. the they have six cookie-looking dudes. artistry in general is to push the bounds of discourse and make us all think, whether it's comedians making jokes and everybody is trying to cancel them or artists telling us things that through music and film aren't otherwise able to be addressed.
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i give credit to jack smiths pushing the boundaries in the same credit i give to dave capell. there's a mayor's race going on in nashville right now. i bet taylor swift and i have totally different opinions on who's the next mayor of nashville. i'm not going to try to cancel one of her stupid videos because it's got too much woke ideology. >> nashville is nashville. country music tv isn't woke. why would country music television pull this? don't they know their audience? >> it's a great question, jesse. this is where i've been hammering on this for a long time. i think we live in an era of great cowardice. the head of cmt is terrified if he doesn't take this action, he or she will lose their job. instead of standing on principle, saying we support the right of artists across the political spectrum to share their opinions -- by the way,
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that's the state capitol of nashville in the background. jesse, as a born and raised nashvilleian, the reason that i believe this city is skyrocketing in popularity is because we have a lot of people of a lot of different backgrounds. when you have people with different backgrounds, and they creatively clash, you end up with something new. the if you have everybody woke and on the left wing, they don't create new things. if you have everybody on the right wing, they're all super conservative, they don't create new things, the reason why the city of nashville works in a cultural way is because you have so many people from different backgrounds with different opinions colliding, and that's what produces something new and dynamic, and this to me represents a repudiation of everything i love about this city. i'm disgusted by what i'm saying. i hope wiser heads will prevail, and the full fulcrum of creativity will flourish in nashville for years and years to come. >> are you going to the "bbarbi"
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tonight? >> i'm wearing for you. i wanted to make sure that we continue to appeal to lesbians, even though you are in a new time slot, as a pruning believer huge believer inthe lesbian exp. >> coming up, why the oregon governor let a possible serial killer on the loose.
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: the pacific northwest is overrun with criminals, like this lunatic who
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stabbed a conservator activist in the back during the 2020 riots. >> someone is stocking us. why are you following us? >> ow! >> jesse: oregon has become the land of crime, so in typical portland fashion, that attacker was led off with nothing more than probation. not only is he not going to jail, he is still allowed to go to protests. if you thought oregon couldn't get any worse, think again. in 2021, outgoing governor kate brown released nearly a thousand criminals in the name of social justice. one of the men she let free, jesse lee calhoun, calhoun was serving 50 months after he had been arrested for burglary, assaulting an officer, car theft. kate brown decided calhoun had paid his debt so she let him go. now police belief calhoun might be a serial killer.
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>> on february 17, melissa smith's 22-year-old daughter kristin smith was found in a wooded area near southeast deardorff and flo bell street in portland. she had been missing since before christmas. a couple months later through more bodies are found in the three-week period. 24-year-old charity perry is found in a culvert near a state park. 31-year-old bridget webster on harmony road. 22-year-old ashley real, and a heavily wooded part of clackamas county. >> jesse: calhoun is back in custody but did oregon's governor release a serial killer on the streets in order to avert your signal? we have requested for comment from the governor and we'll let you know what she says. new daily routine, mornings. it used to be burpees, sun,
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walks, stretching. my new thing is the morning s swim. i highly recommend the morning swim. you'll thank me. let's do texts. peter from spring hill florida. now that laura ingraham is on that-year-old 7:00 time slot, does that mean johnny is working for her now? johnny's mind and i'm never going to let them go. carlos from you, washington. a subway foot-long's are $14 here. it's been a long time since it was a $5-foot long. steve from virginia. some one please get me a virtual doughnut. i've been working a real job for 30 years i need a break. ray. denver, north carolina. we are with jason aldean. don't try that in this small town. thanks for moving to 8:00, jesse. i know that your dinner plans were interruptive but life finally earned. better you than me.
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sausage sam from fort worth, texas. he said prime time to get to the bottom of every story. what ever happened this search to find jesse jr. a good brand of sausage. we got him a good brand. it's thin. the brand as this gave me right now but i will report back tomorrow. always remember. i'm watters and this is my wo world. [cheers and applause] >> sean: welcome to "hannity." we are in beautiful cedar rapids, iowa. hi, iowa. how are you? we have a crowd of thousands. many started lining up yesterday and we are outside. how many of you slept outside overnight? thank you for coming. we appreciate it. to get a spot inside today.

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