tv The Five FOX News November 8, 2024 2:00pm-3:00pm PST
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and he wants to hit the ground running, and he said anybody that i want around me needs to be thinking big, too. >> neil: all right, big things can cost big bucks, but you think you will have ways to pay for all of it? >> he will have a plan to do the right thing for the american taxpayer and the citizens that live here. and he has talked to me about those. he has talked to the people of this country about some of those plans, and they have embraced that wholeheartedly. your member the no tax on tips, no tax on social security, no tax on overtime, he is going to do all of those things and we are going to thrive because people have more dollars in their pocket and they will be extremely successful and happy providing for their families while our nation is more secure. >> neil: governor, always good talking to you. kristi noem of the beautiful state of south dakota. that will do it here for us. here comes "the five." ♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: hello,
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everyone. i'm judge jeanine pirro, along with harold ford jr., jesse watters, katie pavlich, and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ >> the bigger question should be yes, sunny, why did they vote for him? in sweeping -- no, we need to be introspective. >> judge jeanine: good grief. democrats and the media are now on day 3 of completely losing their minds over trump's landslide victory. i like to say that, landslide victory. and the only way they can cope is by cranking up the resistance. radical democrat governors are already scheming on ways to sabotage trump's second term, and it looks like good old greasy gavin wants to be its leader. california governor newsom is ordering up a special session of the states legislature in order
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to trump-proof their progressive policies on climate change and immigration. the freedoms we hold dear in california are under attack, and we won't sit idle, california has faced this challenge before. and we know how to respond. and other blue state governors are also trying to talk tough. >> i would remind you that a happy warrior is still a war warrior. you come for my people, you come through me. >> the key here is that every tool in the toolbox has got to be used to protect our citizens, to protect our residents, and protect our states, and certainly to hold the line on democracy. >> if there is any attack on the garden state, or on any of its communities from washington, i will fight back with every fiber of my being. >> the moment they try and bring a hateful agenda to this state, i'm going to stand ready to stand up and fight for the way
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we do things here. [cheers and applause] >> judge jeanine: and now nancy pelosi is breaking her silence on, kamala's loss by throwing both her and joe biden under the bus. she said, "we live with what happened and because the president endorsed kamala harris immediately, that really made it almost impossible to have a primary at that time. if it had been much earlier, it would have been different." so. harold. what are they resisting? it's only been like 72 hours. >> harold: so good to be back with you again. i would encourage everybody to be gracious in losing and winning. and except the victory. two, it is the tradition in our country for governors to say on behalf of their states, speak on behalf of their states. i'm reminded when president obama was in the white house, and the health care package passed and was called obamacare, officially called the
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affordable care act, there were a number of states that thought that law violated the rights of their citizens, and many of them came together, rightly so, and filed lawsuits. most were unsuccessful, but they filed those lawsuits and they took steps to try to what they say guard their citizens from the harms of the federal government, the tenth amendment allows and other amendments allowed them to do that. i'm reminded also that when the roe v. wade was overturned by dobbs, there were states, powers given back to the states, and states have passed laws to try to form laws to try to reflect the will of the people wherever they may live, arkansas, mississippi, new york, california, wherever the state may be. i'm even reminded president obama campaigned on the fact that he wanted to close guantanamo bay and he couldn't. i think one of the challenges that president trump will face, as all presidents do, is reconciling the ease of making campaign promises with the
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reality of making those promises policy. and that's really the rub in politics, how do you do that? president trump will have an advantage for many reasons, probably the foremost reason being if the congress, if the house turns out to be a republican house, president trump will have the house, the senate, obviously the white house, and a majority of people in the court who lean who have been appointed by conservatives, republicans, that is, on his side. again i'm not surprised by this, judge, this is an american tradition, state standing up to what they believe people in their state want. the good thing about it is if you think they are wrong or i think they are right or vice versa, ultimately voters will make that final determination by electing those state legislatures or governors or reelecting them, for that matter, unseating them. >> judge jeanine: how do we unify the country when the left is already refusing to work with donald trump? you got governor healey, i'm not going to allow my state police to work with president trump. here's my favorite. phil murphy, the governor of
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new jersey. he says, i'll fight to the death, i'll fight back with every fiber of my being. except donald trump got 1.9 million votes in new jersey, which was 600,000 more than phil murphy did when he ran, jesse. >> jesse: some of it is posturing, and you expect that from democrats. they are not always the best losers. unlike republicans, who take it easily and we are just -- [laughter] the resistance is coming into focus. i remember the first trump term it was schiff, comey, mueller, now it looks like the blue state governors. the 2028 present teresa started. best way to raise your profile is a democrat is to clash with trump. now does that help the people you represent? no, but they don't care. thought about that. it's just about politics. the big battle is going to be energy, at first. trump might not win any battle there because the states control their own energy lecture city and water and all of that,
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but he can definitely job on the hell out of them from the white house podium and make them look stupid and make them change their ways there. also homelessness, remember they are going to have the olympics in l.a. in four years, trump is going to be president, and there is what, 50,000 homeless people per block in l.a.? so they are going to have to get that together. and i think he will be effective in that because everybody doesn't want to embarrass the country. and then deportation. they are going to lose the states on this because that is a federal issue, and there will be massive clashes because you are going to have cameras out there making sure that they capture the images of i.c.e. coming along and taking these people away -- they deserve to be taken away. some times you have to do tough stuff. aoc is going to be there tying herself to migrants. it's going to be hysterical. but sometimes dad has to do the tough thing. doesn't make it always looked great, but it's the right thing to do, and that's what we expect. >> judge jeanine: you know,
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katie, the interesting thing is that in california, i mean, gavin newsom can think he's going to be the tip of the spear and the resistance. london breed lost. gas gone, that horrible d.a. in los angeles, lost. proposition 36, which allowed for the increasing of penalties for prop 47 that kamala was in support of, that won, and you know, they are saying they are geared up for the resistance. >> katie: let's talk about the will of the people, especially in california. donald trump flipped nine counties in california. prop 36, as you mentioned, passed in all counties in california. 58 counties passed it because they want more "law & order," they want punishment for criminals, and they want safer streets. it wasn't even close. california is the number one state in the country. people leaving the state, not coming into the state, because of the policies of the far left. a lot of the autopsy so far we have seen this week which will
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continue on the democratic side is they have and beholden to the far left and it has doomed them in this landslide election, not just at the federal level, but also at a lot of these local races. and so democrats have an opportunity now to look at this and say, okay, we can actually work with donald trump. clearly the people of our states want us to be closer to the right side of the political spectrum than the far left side, the entire map shows the red arrows all going to the right, and yet you have people like gavin newsom tripling, doubling down on these failed policies that voters in his state have rejected. >> judge jeanine: it's a great point. what about, greg, those senators who put out those commercials, i worked with donald trump, what are they going to do? >> greg: i don't know. it's a good question. i'll think about it this weekend. you know, i don't think this is about democrats versus republicans. i don't think it's about right versus left. i think that fight is over.
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and it's too small. there is a larger battle that is way bigger than that. it's us versus the brainwash. you know, nothing was real before trump was elected. it's not going to change. but some people didn't buy it, and they had a superpower, and that superpower was their ability to see what was true. they understood that nothing in the media is real. it just so happens that trump supporters, they reached that conclusion first, because they became the target of lies and hoaxes. they were red pilled before the kamala supporters. that will happen later. i talked about the amnesia effect last week, that is when a person who normally trusts the media finds them untrustworthy on topics they understand. so a doctor might trust everything he reads on the front page except that piece on medical insurance because he knows that's b.s. because when you know a topic, then suddenly you see the media for what it is, and that's what
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happened to trump supporters. after they read articles about trump supporters. wait, if they say that i'm a racist or a militant, what are they lying about everywhere else? turns out everything. because right now, this week, when you go outside, you've got to look really hard for a post-election outrage. i mean, we had to look for it. it's on speech winning on, kimmel, msnbc, but go outside and everything is palm because the american public spoke definitively. there is no gray area, you can no longer act like you rule. we spent many years with a tiny segment of elite society that tricks the world into thinking they were the majority, while pushing marginal beliefs, trans beliefs, you know, ten voices on twitter pretended to be 10,000, and we bought it. well, no one is buying it anymore. we are actually the majority. we probably were all along, we were just too scared. the call you are seeing right now is evidence of the hysteria
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portrayed by the media is no longer taken seriously. america got red pilled. now the rest of us have to take a lot of these kamala supporters and show them how they were tricked, as well. show them the "fine people" hoax. you know, sit them down. go like this is what they said, this is the truth. that is the tentpole of all hoaxes. so the first step is to gently show people how every major anti-trump story was a narrative created in reverse. that's why this -- you know when you talked about the media looking at immigration, that doesn't matter. no one is buying it. no one is listening to msnbc, cnn, reading the new york -- that is done. >> jesse: say it. in your face, harold! >> harold: i remind you all, be gracious. [laughter] >> greg: i'll be gracious tonight when we get home. >> judge jeanine: oh! [laughter] ahead, that didn't take long. president-elect trump is already delivering big results on the
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♪ ♪ >> jesse: [laughs] just days into trump landslide victory and he is already delivering big results on the border crisis. new york city mayor eric adams pulling the plug on those freebie debit cards for illegals that cost us over $50 million, and it happened just one day after adams had a phone call with trump. a massive migrant caravan from mexico made up of thousands just got cut down in half as illegals rethink their shot at coming into trump's america.
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this is music to the years of latinos who want a tougher border and backed trump big time giving him historic numbers for a republican. but instead of dealing with that reality, joy reid is trying to shame latino men. >> latino men, who despite the utter disrespect shown by trump and his promise to deport some of your mixed class, mixed status family, most of them voted, 55% majority, to make the deportations happen. yell voted with stephen miller and david duke and against your own sisters and -- who chose kamala harris with 60% of their votes. so you own everything that happens to your mixed status families, and to your wives, sisters, and abuelas from here on in. >> jesse: and abuela is a grandmother in spanish, for those of you, not for those of you, everybody doesn't know that. [laughter] judge jeanine. judge jeanine, they are playing
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the race card on themselves. >> judge jeanine: you know what the crazy part of all of this is? it's so crazy that they will use whatever mental gymnastic they have to come up with to make it negative against anyone who may have supported donald trump. and so what you've got are people like joy reid, who i think pretty much hates everybody, coming out and saying it's all your fault. whatever happens is going to be your fault. you know what? i don't even like talking about them anymore because they represent such a small percentage of americans. look, it turns out that immigration was the second most important issue to voters, and to those voters who rated it the number one issue, 88% of them voted for trump, and those were latinos, and they were blacks, and they were whites, and they were everybody. you know why? because everybody is against crime. everybody is against a country where we let people in unvented
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and we don't even look to make sure that they get arrested, that we allow sanctuary cities to exist, that we allow people like eric adams to give these debit or credit cards because he thinks it's cheaper to give them cash because they don't like the food we give them. give me a break. sometimes i don't like the food, but i eat it. you know, and the whole thing is so crazy. we need to be a safe country. first obligation of america is to protect its citizens, and these people are just noise in the wind. they don't matter. america has spoken. the majority have spoken. we don't want it. deal with it. >> jesse: it is pretty impressive how we are already seeing results and he hasn't even started the transition, greg. >> greg: yeah, the debit card story is proof that the thought of trump gets results. it's like when your parents go away for the weekend so you throw a kegger, but when the adults come home you better start cleaning up the mess because if you don't there will be hell to pay, and i think that is the way trump effective --
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after trump won, the e.u. said they are buying oil from america over russia, i wonder why. the moment the guy wins, the bad stuff starts going away. the latino district that voted for trump by 75% also voted for clinton by a huge margin. i guess that is misogyny, too, i don't know. i think joy reid has completely lost her crap. the latino vote is another example of a media narrative failing to have any effect on an inoculated population. the narrative stipulated that this joke by tony hinchcliffe was going to turn latinos against trump. trump gets what, 45% of the latino vote? the majority of men, largest in recent history, the democrats somehow assume that latinos can't take a joke, right? they also assumed people had no other concerns, you know, besides a joke. may be for elites, latinos on x, you know, who don't have to worry about crime or inflation or the economy or immigration,
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they can get upset about a joke, but nobody bought that narrative, and echo back to what i said before. it's not about left or right anymore. it's about how the news creates narratives to brainwash you, and it's not happening. >> jesse: katie, i believe the leader of mexico is a woman. i don't think latinos have a problem with loading a woman in office. >> katie: looked. the identity politics, the divisive identity politics democrats relied on for years and years and years are sorted to come to an end. they made all of these assumptions about people's skin colors trying to win elections by dividing people up and assuming you are from a certain group or a certain gender, which lately they can't even define, you should vote for democrats because republicans are racist. donald trump is pulling those coalitions away from the democrats, and they don't really have a way to make it up. i mean, having joy reid screaming about how latinos are essentially the new white supremacists in this country
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isn't going to make their community safer, it's not going to make them have more money in their pocket, and they are smart enough to know they are going to vote on issues rather than voting on who they should be told deserves the recognition or their party affiliation, as a result of their skin color, and they are panicking because they really don't know how to work on this, given they relied on it so heavily to win in the past. >> jesse: harold, why don't you guys just make it easy on yourselves and claim it was rigged? >> harold: that would be what you guys would do. we decided not to -- >> greg: what do you mean by you guys? >> harold: you know what i mean. [laughter] i would say couple of things. why don't like about what we're doing with joy reid and some other friends of mine are doing in this space, the voters have spoken. and when barack obama ran for president in 2008 and created these coalitions of voters, coalition of support that included republicans, that included traditional supporters of republican candidates for
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president, we were excited about it. and republicans, i might add the party, the republican party over the last eight years, ten years, has really reorganized and reintroduced and reimagined itself. they are now the party of the working class. we were the party of the working class for a long time, and donald trump, whatever you want to say about him, his being and his political athleticism has allowed him to do that. one in three voters of color voted for trump. he won hispanic men by ten points. he won voters 18-29 by ten points. the way you address that is not to say to those who are 18-29 that you are doing something as an affront to your parents or to say to hispanic men, you are being disingenuous to hispanic women. no, the question is, they made a calculation that donald trump would do better lowering prices, securing the border, lowering crimes in their neighborhoods, making energy in america so more jobs in ohio and pennsylvania and keeping little boys out of little girls' bathrooms and
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sports. those are the issues. all this other stuff we are talking about, it may make us feel good. doesn't make me feel good going to dinner parties, i just walk out now because if they don't want to get serious and honest about what happened, we are going to find ourselves in a cycle of losing. and i don't like losing. i don't like losing not because as a person and politics, because i think when we do governing good as a democratic party, we do it well. but we are not doing it well right now, and we are not going to do it well if we stay focused on the nonsense. in the pettiness that some are talking about right now. >> greg: you go to dinner parties and you don't even tell me about it? [laughter] you know it's funny, just one last thing, you know, it's not racism, it's not sexism, it's brainism. we are bigoted against people who don't have brains. which is why joy reid takes this so personally. >> jesse: and again, abuela is a grandmother in. yesterday we learned -- now we learned abuela. >> greg: should try to learn one new word a day. >> jesse: i will see one
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♪ ♪ >> katie: the liberal media is really after kamala lost in a landslide. and now they are desperate for their own democrat version of joe rogan. they are jealous of how president-elect donald trump connected with millions of young men through the popular podcast. >> when a man is just lost and lonely and not yet radicalized, we don't have the equivalent of joe rogan and jordan peterson to move that man in a feminist direction. >> joe rogan has the biggest audience in the country. disaffected, low propensity men, kind of the audience the harris campaign should be trying to
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reach. >> all of us have to come to grips with legacy media is just not as important as it things it is. joe rogan is more important than any of us. >> katie: can't beat them in the social media game, democrats like van jones are calling for the government to regulate them. >> there are two sets of laws to deal with, the supreme court has allowed this unlimited money dumping in, and then, you know, there are a legal protections that allow these companies to do it they want, to do what they will. i think in a normal country we would say hold on a second, maybe we need to have a different set of regulations for social media platforms ballot they are this big, maybe less money in the system, but that conversation is not happening yet. >> katie: jesse, it's not like the vice president wasn't invited to do joe rogan, and she didn't do it. >> jesse: it was probably smart she didn't do it, it would have been a disaster. >> katie: they think it was a mistake. >> jesse: there were a lot of mistakes made. they keep talking about the need to find their own joe rogan.
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they had one. his name was joe rogan. he was a bernie breaux. they expelled rogan, musk, and rfk jr. out of the party, where did the breaux vote go? if they had a show like rogan, what would it be called? the status quo show? all they do is defend the status quo. do you know how many things are off limits in the media? you can't talk about anything. you have to defend power. you're going to listen to a show for three hours where they try to hide the truth? probably the most boring thing you've ever listened to. so they are not going to find their own rogan or whatever they want to call it until they get rid of all of their stupid rules about what you're not allowed to talk about, who you have to defend. then maybe someone will listen. >> katie: harold, to van jones' point, can the government really regulate the democrats into some kind of success in the podcasting radio world? they have been trying since the 1990s, rush limbaugh, it didn't work.
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why are they going to regulation instead of more -- >> harold: so i listened back to what van said, maybe i'm a little slow, i misunderstood, i thought he was saying about the social media platforms, like facebook and all, when they are saying things about young men and young girls, i have a daughter, i want these algorithms off of things, so i interpreted that. if he said what you are saying, i agree with you, that's not the answer. but let me step back. i disagree with the premise. i think -- i agree with the fact that joe rogan is more powerful in many ways in reaching voters than legacy media. i agree with the premise is that lydia media legacy media has to rethink how and what they do and their self-importance. but where i disagree is that if joe biden had reinstituted some of what president trump had put in as he was getting a border bill, ended cashless bail, increased penalties on criminals, if they had gone back to say we are going to produce more energy here after ukraine
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was invaded by russia, i think we wouldn't have been talking as much, i've said this on the show about joe biden's mental acuity, if his policy acuity was good. so if you have good policy, you can go on any platform and talk about what you are doing, and people are going to say you know what, i like that politician, that man or that woman, what they are saying. before we get to the platforms we want to talk to and share our ideas with, we should get some good ideas first. >> katie: that's a good idea. so, judge, one of the biggest narratives of the election from the mainstream leftist media is trump is a threat to democracy. and actually exit polling shows that he beat kamala harris on that topic because people were watching and saying actually, i think you guys are the ones who are the threat to democracy. >> judge jeanine: yeah, i don't know who mentioned it earlier in the show, but the truth is once they started coming after us, as greg talks about, this gilman effect, we knew we weren't what they were accusing us of, wait a minute, maybe he is not what they are
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saying about him and when they have an often open mind they can look at things more effectively. they say they are looking for their own joe rogan, that is the mistake, the equivalent of joe rogan because joe rogan was in the middle. that's why they lost. they couldn't be centrist. everyone had to be either right or left. we all had to be in a box. and then the box got smaller as they kept compartmentalizing us. racist hispanics and sexist black men. but the truth is you had a joe rogan who had on bernie sanders and federman and bari weiss. he had everybody on. and then when you think about it, maybe this comes down to something as simple as donald trump is a great businessman. donald trump understood business, americans, and selling. i mean, what kind of an
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entrepreneur, 78-year-old man who literally garnered an understanding of social media that the left could not. he got onto tiktok and did these rallies and he was doing podcasts and he had the brothers on his airplane and he had the mind of an entrepreneur who did all of this stuff that wasn't on his generation and he said, i'm going to feed into this, and with that, the democrats didn't have a chance. they weren't as smart as donald trump was. >> katie: so greg, they say they are looking for their own great joe rogan, but joe rogan is a organic success in podcasting. is not like they plucked him out and said this is your job now. it was organic. given their crackdown on censorship, i'm not sure if they can create it. >> greg: it's like someone looking over and going i wish i had -- i wish i had a happy marriage while he is philandering. there are certain things you have to do. and jesse is right. they can't have a rogan under
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the current structure of their -- i don't know, their conversation. remember what they always say, some people here on the stable have said it -- not you are jessica -- they always go, we need to have a real conversatio. we need to have a real conversation. that is what we are doing right now, and you are not answering the question. but if you want to have a real conversation, no, you can't say that, you used the wrong pronoun. they are like ants building and anthill. unaware that there is a giant, massive overpass being constructed above them. they've become so self obsessed. they've turned identity into a fetish. i want to finish with one theory. the democratic party and their media arm lost their muse when musk bought twitter because you have to remember, where did they get all of their stories before trump bought it? twitter. suddenly you sign end to
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cancel culture when twitter changed hands. all the stories were being collected from the loudest accounts on twitter. covington kids was twitter-generated, as was a lot of the full hate crime hoaxes. reporters with simple he get up in the morning, they would look on their feet, and they would fashion the latest outrage based on a purple haired cat ladies hysterical shrieking, and that would become a story, and then it would get picked up, and you would see all of "the daily beast" and all of these terrible little things pick up and run with the story. and then the muse went away, and they are floundering. they don't even know how to do news anymore. it's hilarious. >> katie: all right. up next, more trump victory meltdowns. michael cohen getting trolled with a turkey head filter. ♪ ♪
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>> harold: it's not just the media that's melting down. several u.s. universities are coddling college students who are upset over trump's victory, blowout victory, by canceling classes and providing safe spaces and offering treats like milk and cookies. jesse and i would like that, as well as lego toys and coloring and mindfulness exercises to get their minds off the election results. meanwhile, adult americans are suddenly very interesting in moving to another country. former trump lawyer and fixer michael cohen was among them, but he has since backtracked. viewers on his live stream weren't having it when he announced, trolling him with a turkey head filter. watch this. >> can we stop with that? i appreciate that. i don't like the stupid turkeys. all right, let's just -- let's just knock that stupid [bleep] off, please peered all right? i did. i said i was leaving. and then the following day, get that through your dumb heads, the following day i turned
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around and i said that there is no chance in the world that i'm leaving my country, thank you very much. all right? i'm not leaving anywhere. you leave. this is my country. >> harold: i saw jerry seinfeld talking about how his kids were giving kids some space. i think this is silly. we live in a country where you are going to get things that happen your way and things that don't happen your way and yet to be tough about it. judge, what are your thoughts? >> judge jeanine: think about how they are training young kids, even college kids. we are training our kids when things are bad, don't like something, go in a corner and sulk and have milk and cookies and play with your legos. have to play one more thing. compare someone who is salty about donald trump winning to the 17-year-old in israel who joins the idf and is handed an ak-47 or an ar-15 and goes and fights with their life and their country. compare the two countries in the next 30 years. >> harold: prime time, what are your thoughts on this?
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>> jesse: i'm sinking about leaving this country and where i would go, if i go to an island, you don't want to be the most famous person on an island -- [laughter] they will kidnap you. >> harold: that's what you are thinking? >> judge jeanine: date kidnapped emma, not you. >> jesse: women and children first. and then i was thinking france and i'm like, they are probably not going to like me very much over there. and i can't speak french. and then great britain. bad weather. middle east -- >> forno. africa, you got to be kidding me. asia, same thing. i'm ruling out continents, relax. it became italy and australia, australia is a little wild but i like the people and the language, and then i'm just thinking italy for the food and the weather. so we are going to italy. that's where i'm leaving too. not now, but eventually. >> harold: better question, where would you go? >> katie: i would go nowhere. >> harold: if you have to. >> katie: i will die as an
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american in america. >> harold: so would i, so would he, he said he would go to italy -- >> katie: can i talk real quick about the kids and the campuses. they are paying hundreds of thousands of dollars for these degrees. they should get their money back if their classes are getting canceled. also, this is elitist privilege. if you don't have real problems to deal with, you get to be upset and skip irresponsible it is to do this. nobody who has real problems is crying and skip in class, and these adults are setting these kids up for failure for real life and the real world. it's not nice or empathetic. >> greg: i agree. i hope these students die. their hair back to a normal color. my question is what about our therapy? the people who have to put up with people who need therapy. you know, we are the ones who have to be the brunt of their self obsessed hissy fits and their tantrums. i feel bad for their parents, their relatives, sisters, brothers, you name it. you know come a they are crying now, wait until we start naming the schools, the park, the bridges, the tunnels, the airpo,
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the public buildings after trump when vance becomes president for eight years not to mention the presidential library built by barron. i'm betting on 12 years of winning and then i will need some therapy. i will need serious bed rest because i will be a victim of uncontrollable euphoria. >> katie: to much winning. >> judge jeanine: hear, hear! >> harold: i would go to cape town, south africa. >> judge jeanine: do they have diamonds there? >> harold: i'm not leaving america, let me be clear, but cape town is a special place, before you dismiss the entire continent. >> jesse: i will vacation there. i'm not living there. >> harold: fair enough. "fan mail friday" is up next. ♪ ♪
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now try a sweetener grown by u.s. farmers. introducing zero-calorie splenda stevia. at splenda stevia farms, our plants are sweetened by sunshine. experience how great splenda stevia can be. grown on our farm, enjoyed at your table. (♪♪) ♪ ♪ >> greg: "fan mail friday." first question, probably the only one because harold won't shut up, from lg, this is a good question, name one thing that you have done that you don't think anyone else at the table has done. keep it clean, judge. >> judge jeanine: oh, why are you starting with me? um...
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smoked a hookah in the middle east. >> greg: i smoked a hookah, but not in the middle -- maybe i have. >> judge jeanine: you haven't. >> katie: i have. >> greg: you have? >> judge jeanine: how is the middle east to find? >> katie: israel. >> judge jeanine: yeah! >> greg: such a good question. >> katie: shark cage diving or skydiving. >> greg: you should skydive into a shark cave. >> judge jeanine: skydive. >> katie: let's do it. >> greg: jesse, you have done nothing interesting in your life, let's be honest. >> jesse: that's pretty true. i wake up, i go to work, i go home. come back to me on this. something that no one else has ever done? >> harold: at the table. >> jesse: i put my finger one time -- >> greg: where? >> jesse: you don't remember? >> greg: [laughs] >> jesse: sucker. >> katie: wait, you didn't finish the second. >> jesse: greg -- >> judge jeanine: oh!
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>> harold: staying on the theme of south africa, i picketed against apartheid as a high school -- >> greg: wait, i did that, too. god, everybody did that. >> jesse: virtue signal. >> greg: berkeley and slept in it for six months. you know what i did? i went to a clothing optional swingers resort with an anthropologist. >> katie: wow. is that real? >> greg: yes. >> judge jeanine: do you keep the clothing on? >> harold: i kept the clothing on. >> jesse: i went to a spot in germany. >> greg: really? >> judge jeanine: i went to a show once in where was i, south america -- >> greg: a nude spa in germany. >> harold: i'm going to take over this segment if you don't. >> katie: anyway. ♪ ♪
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♪ >> judge jeanine: it's time now for "one more thing" and jesse goes first. >> jesse: fox is partnering with camo for vets camo our cause. put an end to veteran homelessness in the united states. join us by making a donation and wearing camo monday november 11th. so to donate and shop for great camo fox gear some see some of the gear on the table visit go.fox.u.s. vets. marianne williamson. clay travis, rachel campos duffy, 8:00. >> marianne williamson. what has she been up to? all right, greg. >> greg: tonight, what a show. kat timpf, tyler fischer. bruce goldstein and tyrus. in your face, harold. according to the social security administration the year harold was born which was 1970, the name harold was ranked number
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152 in popularity. you know, it's funny in the same year the name gregory was ranked i could say in your face but you probably feel it enough already. but in your face, harold. >> greg: you are running out of stuff. it's hard to find -- send me harold things. >> harold: this two ladies came out of a restaurant this afternoon and came over to me, sweet little lady she was in your face. >> judge jeanine: i love it. see, it's out there. aall right. harold. >> harold: lorne thank you. traded in baseball game rubber gloves to take a shift raising cane's. oncology conventional for the second baseman fresh off the world series win. serving customers at the drive-thru and walk-in counter. of course he made time to sign memorabilia and talk to adoring fans adoring fans outside the restaurant. make sure the yankees kill them next year. jean enwe don't want to kill
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anybody. >> harold: beat them next year. >> katie: travelers at new york's laguardia airport had to deal with a furry fugitive a raccoon dropped out of the ceiling dangling from a wire before falling on the floor after running around near the spirit airlines gate for 5 minutes and wife officials able to capture and release the rogue raccoon trying to catch a ride. >> judge jeanine: poor, baby. it reminds me of the raccoon that they put down. >> katie: i know. >> judge jeanine: terrible. listen, i'm on hannity tonight. do we have anything. there i am hannity tonight at 9:00 p.m. and raising contain has good chicken? >> harold: good chicken. >> judge jeanine: as good as blue ribbon. harold harold and french fries. >> judge jeanine: that's it for us, everybody. >> bret: happy end of election week and in your face, harold.
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