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tv   The Five  FOX News  November 21, 2024 9:00pm-10:00pm PST

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lee, great words of advice. "the five" is now. ♪ ♪ >> ♪ ♪. >> i'm jesse watters withju
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judge jeanindge pirro, and harod ford junior, martha maccallum and greg gutfeld. 5:00 in new york city and this is of the five. >> ♪ ♪hi florida congressman matt gaetz's withdrew from theht nomination. we go to ric nh for more. >> good evening jesse. president-elect trump has been moving very quickly to nameme tthese nominees. he now has to double back because the former congressman and choice to betorn attorney general matt gaetzas i withdrawn after became clear inj the senate yesterday he didn't have the mast to get through a senate confirmation process he decided to withdraw. d there's no time to waste on a protractedgton washington scuffle trump saidt matt gaetzto didn't want to be distraction for the
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administration during a time the house ethics committee investigated allegations he uses to drugs illegally and had with a minor. vp elect j.d. vance identifiedi the attorney general spot ashe most important in theof administration next to president the transition is developing a short list get soma ag nominees trump already named his criminal attorney toddnche blanche as a deputy attorney check general. pam bondi has been a strong ally.in th ae acting attorney general tu matt whitaker is his nominee to serve as u.s. ambassador to nate but of names selected for othere jobs you c can go back nominate them if he wants back to you no to this it's law and disorder in liberal cities as of the illinois supreme court overturned the conviction of ah hate crime hoax are ruling special prosecutor's decision to retry the actor violated hisinoi
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rights after ida gave him aeart sweetheart deal to drop the charges and so he gets away with staging an attack where he hireo a pair of nigerian brothers who shouted it's maga a country wilp putting a noose around his neck and pouring bleach on them. here's a refresher what went down. the quarter ofey my eyee, and i was like that sam let's go. g and we said we would get that empire. [ bleeps ] saying that's that. [ bleeps ] that's when we yelled the slursh he wanted us to yell saying, hey, aren't you that empire. [ bleeps ] this is maga country.es >> here's what the attornesey hd to say.a >> this was via vindictive persecution not a prosecutionny let's make no mistake. he's back to where he was presumed innocent even thoughve this in s over now and he wantse
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move his life forward i think people need to ask questions of how this happened and why shouli even happen what we do to make s sure this doesn't happen again and what were the facts we never bother to look at because w everybody was distracted with public opinion. >> that's not the only liberal city injustice the manhattan district attorney is waste timed and mone my prosecuting a goodnl samaritan like daniel penneyinal will dangerous criminals runugh wild for the city he oversees just this week alone a touristls got slashed a random attack an ice pick from an elderly man got shoved in. and a homelessnd a maniac with t priors randomly stabbed three people to death. judge can you explain this courr decision in illinois?, >> the court saithd they made te decision based not on merits ofu the casebs or the substance but the fact of that kim fox there
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had been a grand jury indictmeno and they didn't know across which means you don't admit to doing it or committing the crime itself and as part of that know across he would agree to a forfeiture of the 10,000-dollar bail set that then was considered a resolution of the case because it is a plea. so when a special prosecutorin, comes in and indicts they sayno know you can't do that you don't get two bites at the apple it's double jeopardy. this is a situation where wet ta aren't taking a position on whether he lied or what he did and the problem see cause fore the city and the police's department it's just a procedural mechanism that shouldn't have occurred based on it being no cross and there was a resolution where bail was a forfeited.
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>> do you agree legally withgrei that standpoint? t >> it's a fair way to do it but he's not the most important person in this segment when you hear about all these people running around three and able to be on the streets after they stabbed and killed people and randomly selected victim whether it's a nurse or somebody working in a bodega and they are free to walk around i've been in the trial downtown at 100 centerntre street watching the danny penney trail where you have a guy and dated by alvin break case butag ahead ofg, everybody else's cas today was incredible day for the defense with the medicalt examiner who adjusted circlesle around the prosecution medical examiner who apparently made up things that this expert had never heard of like a jugular choke there's nothing in the literature about this saying heo had never heard of it but this is what's happening it's ation politicized asian of the criminal justice system where
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this guy danny penney a savioreb to everybody on that train the without they would die when then guy come as out and says i'm goy to kill somebody i don't care if i go back to jail for lifeied, everybody was petrified last thing i would say is we owe this guy a debt of gratitude for what he did in the medical examiner made clear he died of being aic psychotic episode as well as toxicity from the drugs in his, system similar to cocaine. >> harold ford jr.? >> glad to have everybody and ig can't agree if the judge more than i ever have.. we spend a lot of time disagreeing but i think the way you characterize what happened is exactly right. whatever people think about the underlying facts of the originah resolution of the case may be a shouldn't have been whatha happened but it is what happenee and legally he was entitled to.
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the decision the spring court rendered we have a new police commissioner and the city who ir was nothin, g but the best of she's had a big job overlant development and a lot of the new technology and innovation at the police department i wish her the best as she now has the day to day hand hang comment of dealing with crime in our city.e i agree if you on that as well what i've seen at trial i'm not in the courtroom like you are bullet i've read all the public narratives brought together i'm not seeing anythinnog thatr ye suggests anything else and somei right trial isn't over yet but i think your analysis is around that is excellent. >> why don't you guys just kiss curry. >> putting the legal stuff aside you see a guy like him everybody knows what he did. the witnesses said he did what he did and he doesn't really have to face the kind of justice
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that a lot of republicans have to face with made up charges ann messed up prosecutions. >> he was in jail for six days supposed to do 50 days. what bothered me the most aboutm olthis case based on what you sd is this year lack of humiliatioa and embarrassment. at least on the part of thisdivi individual. he needs teedso come forward anp look i used up police resources i made up a story i was worried about my job whatever he has to say. i mean it is an embarrassing abuse of the use of, oflaw enforcement and legal matters. we need to have shame sometimesd in our lives and in this countro and when you do something thisan embarrassing and egregious i don't know where you found thehi wherewithal to go and cbc and tell this whole story with a tier in his eye saying he left
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the rope around his neck because he forgot it was there and robert roberts is patting him or the knee and harris says yousays know what you're the victim of a modern-day lynching and nobody should be judged on the base of their sexuality wake up. i mean this is an embarrassingll thing and i would like to see a little embarrassment evident.in >> not happeningg. not here. >> remember the time period s ha. this country would like this happened. . it was a hate crime against whites. and this case was important because it was providing an incentive against committing hoaxes, and now that evaporates.
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now there are no disincentives for fomenting racial wars, racial division or hate crimes, it is just another -- i can't remember how many hate crime hoaxes actually ended up with a punishment. psychiatric counseling. this guy admitted basically killed by forfeiting bail, so he is guilty. but i want to talk about the crime, there is an unholy pattern, it is a three-step pattern that happens with crime, immigration, even with trans radicalism. one, something bad is about to happen. two, nothing is done about it as it grows. three, finally something is done. whether it is daniel penny or someone else, and then the media industrial complex cares. when you reach the third step, which is action, then they pay attention. then they follow the law. then they arrest daniel penny. they are fine the first two, but
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then it is a crisis when there is actually some of the steps in. daniel penny took the third step, which was action. a place for alvin bragg has never been to. he happily lives in the first two. coddling criminals, releasing them to an unsuspecting public, including his own employees. one of his own prosecutors was assaulted by a sex maniac. as long as you enable these policies without experiencing the risk, you will always seek to punish the people who are willing to take action. and this pattern is in everything. immigration, crime, dealing with hate crime hoaxes. it's fine until there's action, and then they care. >> jesse: well, that was great action by the nigerian brothers, it goes without saying, the acting. they have a future, and bravo to fox nation. >> greg: "fox & friends" midnight, a new show peered. >> jesse: ahead, calls are growing louder for joe biden to resign after he quiet quits the presidency. ♪ ♪
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>> greg: joe biden, or whatever is left of him, catching flak for checking out during the last two months of his presidency. there he goes. bowling near nate silver opining on x, "is there any particular reason to assume biden is competent to be president right now? it's a very difficult job, dangerous world, extremely high high-stakes decision in ukraine, he should resign and let harris finish the last few months."
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overreacting to a report biden avoiding reporters at the g20 summit in brazil despite repeated efforts like this to engage him. >> will you talk to us, sir! as a gift to the press, will you please talk to us! mr. president, president biden! please! we haven't heard from you all trip! mr. president! >> greg: that was actually karine jean-pierre shouting. he doesn't even remember her now. all right, harold, so all it takes is a proxy war with russia to remind us that maybe we should have a functioning president. we are firing missiles into russia and our press is more obsessed with tulsi being accused of a russian asset. this insanity is terrifying. you should be ashamed of yourself. >> harold: well, i have a slyly different opinion on this. i think a couple things. i think the escalation of activity in ukraine is not on our side, it's on the north korean side.
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the fact you now have north korean troops working alongside and fighting alongside -- i don't blame president biden for making the calculation that we should allow, we should give more flexibility, more authority, and more military autonomy to the ukrainians to make these decisions. two, i will remind everybody, there has been a big group of republican and democrat leaning, republican leaning voices in the military over the last several months who said we should have given this authority to the ukrainians long before. had he not given them the authority and the north koreans fighting alongside ukrainians and worst things happen, they would probably be those criticizing him. three -- for that, rather. three, with president-elect, i don't want to hear from the president, the current president, if you have a new president coming in, if he doesn't have to say other things. i think his actions speak loud. you have not heard incoming president speak with the kind of objection ability that some are about what he is doing. and frankly, the idea, nate silver, who i respect, the idea of him resigning, the notion and
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reality of him resigning and giving the job to vice president, the man already decided he wasn't going to run, as he finishes. >> greg: i agree with you, biden's actions speak louder than his words, especially when he falls. >> harold: that hurt. >> greg: yes. martha, imagine if the media had been covering biden honestly at the start of his dementia. instead we have a cover-up. if you didn't have the cover-up, we wouldn't be in this situation. the democrat party would be a far better situation. they would have had a better candidate. we wouldn't be worried about all of this stuff. isn't it on them? >> martha: all of these things happening postelection really should have happened before the election. if he really felt this was the right policy to give ukraine the weapons and the capability to use them, he should have acted upon that as president. this is a window that is extraordinarily dangerous and he is enacting policies. look what is happening, i say, why now? and i'm wondering if
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president-elect trump and president biden are speaking about what they are doing because they absolutely should be. they should be coordinating these efforts. this is a very frightening potential world war iii scenario that is going on right now. north korea is fighting alongside the ukrainians. russia has just fired in intermedia range ballistic missile, the most powerful weapon they have used throughout the course of this war. i always knew this was going to get hot and ugly in this interim period, and now these people like nate silver who are coming out of the woodwork and saying maybe he shouldn't happen president this long, you should have spoken out sooner. honestly, when i think about the fact that george clooney was pretty much the person who turns the tide on this conversation with the aid and knowledge of president obama, a lot of people knew a lot about how capable he was a long time ago, and that is a very frightening story we are going to hear a lot more about.
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>> greg: koreans are fighting alongside russia peered. >> martha: correct. >> harold: i said it incorrectly, too. >> greg: we like you to leave, harold. >> martha: it's harold's fault i said it. >> greg: so judge, they know if he were to resign in the next story will be why didn't he do it sooner? and they don't want that question. >> judge jeanine: if i mike donilon or one of the biden advisors, there is no way i'm going to allow kamala harris to be the president. and talk about kamala harris being the president, that's like a participation trophy. okay? she is a dei candidate who rises to the level of president. what a metaphor for what this country is going through. she cannot be the president. we have been operating without a president for a long time. and the pathetic part of that sound that we have, mr. president, would you talk to us, would you talk to us -- he is just walking away like i don't have to talk to you.
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i mean, he missed a group photo with the g20. he is avoiding the reporters. he is begging for a word. they are begging for word from him. and yet what is going on? he is sending the missiles to ukraine that can go into russia, so we are going to be on the edge of world war iii. he is loosening up the immigration policies, so when trump comes in, it is worse than we even thought. you got gina raimondo and commerce who says there is going to be no money in the commerce department when trump comes in. these people are trump haters. in addition to being trump haters, they are kamala hater. joe biden would rather walk on hot coals then allow kamala to be the president. >> greg: last word to you, jesse. make it semiintelligent. >> jesse: i can't do that, greg. it is funny to watch this lame duck get lost in the jungle, play hide and seek with trudeau
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behind palm trees and miss photos. they are rolling out the red carpet. joe biden will be in nantucket next week celebrating thanksgiving and time to figure out with the best day is to pardon hunter biden. racing up the escalation ladder with the russians. still flying illegals into the country. and on his birthday, he gave the presidential medal of freedom to the planned parenthood chief. and wouldn't let the media in because they weren't allowed to ask him questions. this man's an embarrassment. it looks like he is more of just a dreadful halftime show between two trump terms, kind of the last gasp of the establishment. going out of quite a whimper. and where was nate silver? bravo, nate. hi ho, silver. we could have used you when this guy was falling off bikes and shaking hands with ghost. you let 10 million people into the country, spent $7 trillion a year, and chinese diamonds are
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falling out of his family members pockets. this guy blew the debate and then his understudy got cooked in the general. this guy should have gone a long time ago. the democrats are like the kind of people that show up after the fight is over. oh, yeah, let me add 'em, hold me back, no, okay? you guys lied the whole election and then when you lost you one credit for telling the truth. now all of these people sound like hannity. >> greg: they do. can you show the picture of joe in the jungle, it's great. it's like he's the host of survivor cocoon addition. >> jesse: he looks like a drug kingpin. >> greg: yes, he does. >> judge jeanine: an old one. >> harold: you won the election. now you've got to govern. i wish you the best. i disagree -- >> judge jeanine: trump is right, maybe he should have started running the country on the day he won.
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>> harold: he can't do that, january 20th. what's that thing, the constitution? >> greg: up next, d.o.g.e. promises heads will roll in the bloated government. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ >> martha: it's raining out there. get ready for the age of d.o.g.e., when it will be sunny for elon musk and vivek ramaswamy laying out their plans for the new lead to formed department of government efficiency, sounds like an oxymoron in there somewhere, but why they are the right man for the job. they are going to take on, or "the wall street journal" piece, encourage everybody to read this, it lays out exec have a plan to do this. it says "millions of unelected, unappointed civil servants within government service who view themselves as immune from firing thanks to civil service
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protections peered we are entrepreneurs, not politicians, we will serve as -- we won't just write up reports and cut ribbons. we will cut costs. and here is ramaswamy promising to outright delete inefficient agencies. watch this. >> we expect mass reductions, we expect certain agencies to be deleted outright. we expect mass reductions in areas of the federal government that are bloated. we expect cuts of federal contractors. >> martha: judge, it is like a whole new age. >> judge jeanine: isn't it refreshing? >> martha: extraordinary. when people find out how much garbage there is and how much spending, imagine having a job you can never be fired from and most people don't even have to show up for work five days a week. really this goes back to trump's appointment of supreme court
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justices because two huge decisions came out of that. you had the west virginia versus epa decision and the chevron decision. a lot of people thought what are they doing, what is this all about? this is what it was all about, because these agencies have so much power to put regulations on you, to charge you more to do things, basically to make their own laws -- but now they are on the chopping block. >> judge jeanine: the supreme court cases you refer to are cases that literally - take the power away from people in middle management in government who think they are going to control business in this country. they are going to impose all of these regulations. they are going to decide whether or not you are going to drill, start a business, what regulations you've got to follow. but that's no surprise because you've got two self-made billionaires here. musk and ramaswamy, they are not into people who need a mental health day or need to work by remote access, or need all of
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these sick days. these are two ceos coming together, and we should have done this a long time ago. treat this country the same way we run a corporation. if you are not creating a benefit. if you are engaging in inefficient kinds of productionl kinds of regulations, and you are not involved in profitability, you go. if we can cut you, you are going to go. that is what the private sector does. but for some reason the government feels that they are entitled to suck our money, pay the wages, increase the size of the federal government. but these guys are very different. and you know, look, the pentagon just failed its seventh audit. i remember when hillary clinton was secretary of state. they were missing $6 billion. you've got raimondo saying we're
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taking the money out of commerce, trump is never going to see it. these two are going to start a weekly podcast, and you know who's going to come on that show? people who worked in government, who can talk about the excess in government, the redundancy, the lack of profitability, and like trump, these guys are good, and they are honest, and they told by. >> martha: and harold, they have attorneys that will be involved in these agencies that will come in and say you know what, actually the president can amend civil service rules, that he can govern the structure of the u.s. government because they have to do this in every way they can through executive order. and in that, they can move agencies to other states. do you think legally they will be able to get this around congress? >> harold: they won't be able to get in around congress because congress still has the role of passing the laws and authorizing the spending peer i think something that is overlooked here, you mentioned in your question and the judge amplified it. i think it serves two purposes. for me, the chevron decision is the most important decision from the court about the structure of
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government in a really, really long time. it's going to force congress to actually enumerate specifically things they want from these agencies, to take the legislating ability from agencies and restore it back with the constitution said it should be, with congress. i hope it forces congress is to actually sit and try to understand the results and the outcomes of their spending. right now we have not passed a budget on time in congress, in the country, four times in the last 43 years. why? because they have gotten lazy -- lazy from a legislating standpoint, a work standpoint -- and they have gotten sloppy. the chevron decision is going to make them have to sit and enumerate specifically for every agency, every dollar they appropriate to them, how they spend it, and what they spend it on peter i would give a little piece of advice to mr. ramaswamy and mr. musk in this regard. civil service stuff you want to do is great. it's not going to produce results in terms of savings that you want, but it will help reiterate and underscore what we want to do on the chevron side. the real issues and spending in government, this is not the
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first time a president has done this. president clinton did it, and recently present obama did it. the difference was clinton allowed the things in government to be implemented. president obama just kind of ignored the recommendations. to answer your question, martha, congress still has to act. what they are senior advisors. unnamed essentially senior advisors to the president have an outsized microphone because they are so successful in business, and they are people who follow them in the republican caucus. >> martha: jesse, a lot of people don't show up for work in the government, and they haven't since covid. the national archives were literally shut down for over two years. veterans couldn't get their information from anybody because nobody showed up for work. do you see this as a sea change? >> jesse: that's a good way to get people to retire early. five-day workweek, get back to the office. you know what, i'm sorry, give me a severance. or if they are going to relocate an agency to let's say wyoming,
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goodbye, i will be working in the private sector. i love d.o.g.e. because it is so simple, even i can understand it. they are there to cut regulations, cut head count, and cut costs. because you have unelected bureaucrats making rules and regulations that is the supreme court said they are not supposed to be doing. so they are going to put all of these little d.o.g.e. elves into these agencies and use ai to identify where these stupid regulations are and present it to the president so he can nullify it. than if you have these regulations cut you need less workers to enforce these stupid regulations or create new regulations. and then the costs are ridiculous. i just found out that this stupid guy, what was his name? the guy that leaked all that stuff with comey? who cares. he had a $70,000 death desk he ordered for the department of justice. a $70,000 desk? what the hell is that?
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they also had to spend millions of dollars to find out why prisoners wanted to escape from prison. [laughter] >> martha: to get out. >> jesse: these are the kind of things, no-brainer, get that off the books. greg mentioned this before, the extra have a deadline. that's never happened. >> martha: july 2026 peered they like deadlines. when you want a rocket off a launchpad. >> greg: why do we hate the dmv? because we can see it. you go in, it's -- it is the few rare interaction with government where you can actually, with your own eyeballs and your own ear balls experience the inefficiency and laziness up close. it's transparent. i'm sure many veterans have felt the same way about the va in the past. it's the gelman and need you affect applied to the government. you assume the government is doing its best until you experience part of it.
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then you wonder what about the rest? if the dmv, i can see it, what about the stuff i can't see? government has -- its own growth. the same way cancer is an overgrowth of cells or a bad heart becomes enlarged. the massive scale of government isn't a sign of progress, it is a sign of disease. layer upon layer of rent seeking bureaucrats, harold, have hijacked the government, and with one purpose, and that is to feather the nest. this is happening -- more administrators than teachers. harold! answer me! >> harold: trading places. >> greg: imagine what you don't see, they are going to show us. >> martha: all right, from d.o.g.e. to jaguar. elon musk is mocking luxury car brand's of woke new ad that doesn't feature any cars. ♪ ♪
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new customer offer in bonus bets when you sign up now. betmgm. download and bet today. ♪ ♪ >> judge jeanine: another company is going woke. will they go broke? jaguar releasing a truly bizarre ad featuring androgynous models but no cars. ♪ ♪
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♪ ♪ all right, greg, do you think people want a car that has trans issues? [laughter] >> greg: you know jaguar anticipated the blowback, in case it is all a joke, going to look like they are in on it. they are answering every comment on x, changes on the way, trying to create an air of mystique to deflect from the air of woke stupidity. director of their brand strategy recently spoke of his vision. they have 15 dei groups at jaguar. they have more dei than they have designers, and it just shows how dei and a company reproduces, expand as a form of self-preservation and competes with the company mission. the company mission to create a great car that turns a profit.
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you can't do that and have 15 dei groups or even one dei group because their mission is different than the customers' vision. in your face. >> judge jeanine: okay, thank you. you know, jesse, don't you think that a car that's called like a jaguar, like a viper, like a barracuda, when you think of that, then all of a sudden it looks like they hired the team from bud light after they got fired over there. >> jesse: i have always thought of jaguar as a classic, waspy car, that people with money have but don't want to show it off but it is reliable, dependable, but also very upscale and luxurious. now i look at it and i think of dylan. and i know -- >> greg: bob dylan? >> jesse: i know someone with a jaguar. i know someone with several jaguars. what i am hearing is there considering selling the lease. and i wouldn't be surprised if
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this happened throughout the country. >> judge jeanine: okay. porsche on the other hand just dropped a commercial, a banger commercial, 993 turbo flying down -- a jaguar, a mean car, got a lot of speed. why would they do this? who are they attracting with that? >> harold: it's a risk. and we will see if it works. it looked like a peloton add, when we got this in our mix here. one thing about the marketplace and one thing about capitalism, this is either going to work, or it's not going to work. if it doesn't work, i suspect they are going to change this, change it pretty quickly. >> greg: does it have to work? if your goal is dei, it doesn't have to work. >> harold: they still have to sell cars peered. >> martha: first of all, it is a stupid ad. it says live vivid. what does it mean? create exuberant means nothing. the sledgehammer at the end is an obvious reference to the 1984
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commercial that had meaning. think different. we are going to smash everything, think differently, like a d.o.g.e., crushing d.o.g.e. idea, but this has no -- they are not going to make any cars until 2026 and then they're going all tv. >> judge jeanine: that's wors worse. my jaguar is for shale. "the fastest" is up next. ♪ ♪ okay everyone, our mission is to provide complete, balanced nutrition for strength and energy. yay - woo hoo! ensure, with 27 vitamins and minerals, nutrients for immune health. and ensure complete with 30 grams of protein. (♪)
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♪ ♪ >> harold: welcome back. another celebrity is leaving the country over president trump's victory. ellen degeneres and her wife portia de rossi have reportedly
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fled to the u.k. trump's return to the oval office played a big role in the decision. your honor, you were going to stay of kamala harris won, rig right? >> judge jeanine: i never -- >> harold: i know -- >> judge jeanine: these people are worth hundreds of millions of dollars, right? they felt so strongly about kamala harris being the president and the fact that she didn't make it, they are going to leave the country, but they felt so strongly good they gave her $3,000. but they are going to leave the country. >> harold: prime time, what are your thoughts about this? >> harold: going to regret this decision because no one will recognize her about this a. that level of celebrity, greg understands, you have to have a certain level of recognition when you go shopping, fill up your tank of petrol, i guess they call it over there. she's not going to disappear into the countryside and live in
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adulation. >> martha: don't recognize you when you get your petrol? [laughter] just curious. >> jesse: premium gasoline, actually. >> harold: martha, what are your thoughts on this? >> martha: i like what charlamagne said, it's my country, why would i leave? i think it is a lame move. that's all have to say about that. >> harold: exclamation point? >> greg: what did the u.k. do to deserve this? but more important, the whole point is not being recognized. this has absolutely nothing to do with trump. ellen is about as popular as monkeypox. she lost her fan base. i watched her netflix comedy special. it was a painful pity party. you should watch it just to feel uncomfortable. it is just manufactured martyrdom. she is getting out because he is nothing else to do here. >> judge jeanine: exactly. >> harold: do you agree with that? >> judge jeanine: i do agree with that. i don't know what's on the diddy
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list -- >> greg: ain't her, though peered. >> harold: you should never leave your country. "one more thing" is up next. ♪ ♪ liberty mutual customized my car insurance so i saved hundreds. with the money i saved i thought i'd get a wax figure of myself. oh! right in the temporal lobe! beat it, punks! only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty, liberty, liberty, liberty ♪ ruled out of rome by a man named caesar augustus, who understood himself to be the son of a god. is about to be challenged by a baby in a manger. hillsdale college invites you to explore how early christians worshiped, faced persecution, and transformed the roman world in the completely free online course. ancient christianity. the audacious message of the old and new testament is in the time of the egyptians,
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the babylonians, the assyrians, the greeks, and the romans. the god of the universe actually revealed himself to humanity. ancient christianity is one of dozens of free online courses offered by hillsdale college. sign up at learnfromhillsdale.org. to discover how early christians paved the way for our civilization. out of the collapse of the western half of the roman empire comes pure chaos. but out of that chaos comes faith. whether you're a person of faith, a history enthusiast, or just curious, you'll discover inspiring stories from the earliest beginnings of christianity. including why early christians faced persecution and how they spread christ's message during the fall of rome. it truly is miraculous that christianity has survived to the 21st century. at no cost to you, you'll receive a front row seat to history as it unfolds
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through the eyes of the earliest christians. i'm kent calvert. this is our course on ancient christianity. let's begin. this inspiring story is waiting for you at learnfromhillsdale.org. sign up for free today. it's hard to say who'll be more excited on the day after christmas. the guy who got a brand new truck from mom and dad. or the guy who got all the weathertech protection for his truck. like laser measured floorliners... the under seat storage system... no drill mud flaps... impact liner with shock absorbing rings... and top it off with the alloy cover. find these american made gifts or get a gift card instantly at wt.com. (♪) (high five)
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the next few weeks. do it. you'll get to heaven sooner. i had to read it, greg. i know that's all right. all right. tonight i got kat timpf. i've got andrew gruel, heather zumarraga and tyrus. let's do this in your face. all right. a study claims that cannabis is linked to less cognitive decline. as you age. isn't that interesting? it came from a purely objective source called the marijuana herald. the. so i said, what is the marijuana herald? and this is what i found. this is the marijuana herald. check it out. the marijuana herald, you guys are so wow, i didn't know you had your own. was there something that's supposed to pop up? now i'm going away. marijuana. that's it. i'm done. he's done. second day in a row, you guys. well, if he's leaving, we're leaving. i'll see you. good night. everybody. welcome to jesse watters. prime time tonight. please keep doctor

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