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tv   Huckabee  FOX News  July 19, 2009 2:00am-3:00am EDT

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same channels always. >> announcer: ladies and gentlemen, governor mike huckabee. [ applause ] >> mike: that here much. welcome to huckabee from the "fox news" studios in new york city. the president and the congress say there is a major health care crisis in this country and everything to push a bill they claim is the reform our country needs. tonight our neighbors in canada, they have such a plan. i wondered how is it working out for them to do was speak with
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two canadians, a doctor and a mother of a young patient. you are going to want to hear their first hand account of government healthcare and then you can beside if that's what you want for your family. >> what do your fellow americans think of the proposed plan, and i wonder if our leaders in washington are even listening. exclusive and read the results from pollster scott chris nissen tonight on the show. [ applause ] >> mike: he is a comedian, actor and talkshow host, but tonight you're going to learn what a miracle his success really is, and he is going to reveal what you can do for your kids that could save their lives. tom arnold will share some stunning secrets he bottled up for many, many years. applause pause. >> mike: he rocks the house with his musical style catapulted him to stop him -- start on "american idol." tonight but weiss joins the "little rockers" for the debut of a new song i promise you'll love this song. it is going to be on the show
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tonight. >> many of you have e-mailed us to say that you have missed our future, the joe biden comedy hour. he has given us so much good material. this week he did not disappoint. >> it's the joe biden comedy hour. [ applause ] here is a joke. >> people when i say that ultimate say what you're talking about joe did you do her time he went to go spend money to keep from going bankrupt due to this, that's what i'm telling you. >> mike: that's right joe, have to spend money lots of it, joins of dollars, to keep from going bankrupt. you bet. _ the sense to me. well, if you don't care about how much you pay in taxes and futile care if he government takes your doctor and limits the
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procedures you get until the federal peer out of cruz, they don't do a thing. just sit back and watch her liberty disappear. the healthcare bill being put forward in congress is a disastrous plan for reforming health care. but it is absolutely brilliant for implementing the obama government redistribution of wealth agenda and using your tax dollars to fund the end of life through abortions. this bill creates both a new government run system and a new mandate requiring almost all new employers to provide health care or pay a big fat tax. president obama says if you like your insurance company can keep it. but how can you keep something that doesn't exist anymore to keep many employers will decide that it's cheaper and easier to pay the tax. that forces their close off the government plan. and for those who still have private insurance, the government will just undercut those private plans by subsidizing the government plan and then taking away the tax-advantaged of a private employer plan. the government finally the only game in town.
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those bureaucrats will make medical decisions probably won't love your grandmother or your newborn in the initial intensive care nearly as much as you do. almost half of the uninsured in this country either qualify for existing government programs but have a general than that, where they can comfortably afford insurance but choose not to buy it. then are some folks who are here illegally and get the paper them. the rest are uninsured and that amounts to actually less than 10% of the population. would it make sense to me to bring them onboard instead of just throwing all the rest of us over the sidekick you why we destroy the system that works for about 9/10 americans give you all this other stories of the goose that laid the golden eggs. not content with getting just one golden egg every day, the beauty farmer killed his goose and cut her open second to find a belly full of gold. the study found nothing but goose guts. our small-business owners are the geese laying the golden eggs this country.
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and if president obama and the congress followed the job killing tax of adding more taxes, the united states will need a new national bird. not a majestic eagle, but the goose, and a dead one at that. i think i'll pass on the goose guts. if you agree contact your congressman and a senator. and you need to do it now because they need to know if they are willing to risk your job to another or to be risking theirs. go to mike huckabee.com, click on the "fox news" feedback, i would like to know your thoughts about today's show. at mike huckabee.com in the feedback section you'll find a link to every civil member of the house and senate. and you can make contact today and tell them what you think that you will. >> as a result congress rushed to pass a health care reform bill, the president is pushing hard to sell his plan. >> it'll mean lower costs, more choices, and coverage you can count on. it'll save you and your family money. you'll have to worry about being priced out of the market. you won't have to worry about
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one illness leading to your family going into financial ruin. >> my next guest is a canadian doctor who has seen what a socialized health entries. joining us from toronto, dr. david grapes are. but for being here. >> an absolute pleasure, governor. thank you for having on the show >> mike: i want to store the fact that you were once a strong proponent of socialized medicine of canada as a physician and then something happened. he saw some things in canada. we have written a book about it, written extensively about it have spoken out about this or is it a change. what happened that made you change your mind to do. >> governor want to overstate my point. revenue canada i soaked up a few things from the environment. a local ice hockey, an ability to convert turnpike to celsius and i had also believe that if government did when they came to health care it would be compassionate and fair.
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again when i was an adolescent growing up in canada what i wanted to do is get in medical school. i was at a health policy expert. i got into medical school and i saw the compassion of the system that i saw people are treated and frankly, governor, i got bumped by reality. >> mike: you saw that people were waiting in long lines just to get to another line. i think what a lot of americans want to know is if we go to a government run healthcare system, what likely is to happen to the individual consumer to do how does this affect the guy out there who. >> look, part of the problem that our site has in this debate is that people are pretty used to waiting in queues for certain things, right ticket you want to get a certain vacuum cleaner, you go to your department store and you order it and they tell you it'll be two weeks. but what we're talking about what goes on in canada, britain or sweden, is that people wait for basic care. according to the government's own statistics and on terror, and these are government
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statistics not mine, some right-wing think tank statistics are every two people who require urgent cancer surgery, one will get it in a timely manner. to put a human face on that what i discovered when i got out of medical school is people are waiting and suffering that use the words of the supreme court of canada, again not my words the supreme court of canada some people simply die. there are a few cases that just really turned my mind on this issue. >> mike: dr. koch estate with me because i talk to smart and will be joined by the mother of a canadian teenager. this teenager is in pain and in need of medical care. and after received in years this country but you get it in days in america. we'll l l l l l l l
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>> mike: welcome back. for the break we gain insight into how the national health care system in canada grey works. chances than gilbert whose 15-year-old son, britain, only to spinal fusion. in canada yesterday, list and that's just to get a surgeon's name that gets on another list for that specific surgeon and that has to wait. it could be years. in the meantime he might be living in excruciating pain. then refuse to accept that and with the help of a us-based organization called thymic medical alternatives which helps canadians find faster care has figured out how britain conducted procedure done in the u.s. in days rather than months. then, this is an important story because this isn't something you are unfamiliar with. you had a similar situation with your own back years ago. samantha did.
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>> mike: tell me what happened at. >> i first noticed i had back pain was 15 years old. they came and went. went to a doctor here and there that he got a painkiller, though to the physio- just accepted it as part of life. you know. in my 20s when i had kids i got significantly worse. i got to the point where i had sharp pains down the backs of my legs, sides of my legs. i couldn't always pick up my kids. i didn't have the strength to do that. but it have to climb into a chair so i can do that. i couldn't bend down. at the time i hit 27 it was to the point where it was seriously affect my life. there are many things i couldn't do. play with my kids. i couldn't hold down a job etc. stand for any length of time. so i started going to see my doctor. and he again recommended anti-inflammatories, get some rest, who's a little bit of baby weight i had left on. you know this is just really just wasn't an answer for me. >> mike: and not suggesting like a specialist gmac now.
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>> mike: amorites or anything like that keep you. >> now. i went back and got fed up with the doctor had sort of a new doctor. he was sympathetic to my pain. he ordered an sri, mri, ct scan on the same day. it took me months to get them good show that a condition called spondylolisthesis that required surgery. he said that the surgeon would give me a call for a time to come into his office and that was nine months away. >> mike: nine months? >> nine months. >> mike: your son is a similar situation it's like an inherited condition cemented his communist. >> mike: were taking a different course for him and us to go through timely medical alternatives and then come to united states with her son. >> i will. going to the canadian healthcare system i was forced to deteriorate to a point where i was basically addicted to morphine. i was using a walker to get around. i was wearing diapers because i know control of my bladder because the nerve to my bladder.
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>> mike: you are 20 years old kick your sumac*nobody would listen to me. twenty-four surgeons they all told me i was too young when tony specifically i was too young and not suffered enough, had not been paying enough and there were people older than me and people who had been on the wait list longer than me are going to get it first. i couldn't get a date for surgery. >> mike: on all people can hear but people in our audience audibly gasped when you said you were told you had not been in pain long enough. americans are not used to hearing that. they're not used to hearing after his pain on and suffer by the bullet take on more work market put in a diaper this were not used to that. i want to bring the doctor back in. doctor, do we have this kind of situation to look forward to if we go to a system that the government ends up becoming the primary caregiver to give. >> governor, costs are rising in the united states when there's a fork in the road. some people including the president said let's expand washington's reach.
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let's get smart government aircraft involved, but to make ethical decisions. that's if we can save some money. ultimately all that fancy talk something means one thing, the rationing of health care. you get stories like when you just heard or stories i've seen where people are literally suffering in some cases dying for the care they need. but there's a path not taken and that's more individual choice and competition act we do the other 5/6 of the economy. i don't disagree with the president in suggesting we need reform but my goodness when you look at what goes on in canada, britain or sweden, all they do there is make people suffer by making them wait for care. >> mike: i want to be very clear. i don't impugn the president's motive or even that of most numbers of congress because i really think they genuinely want to see reform of the doctor system and all of us agree there is need reform. i think the question is, is this the direction we need to go. what we're learning from new doctor, as well as from linda gilbert, is if we go to a
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canadian system, it may not be a reform, it may be a d. form of the system. then i want to ask about your son quickly. you will bring into the united states, is not what will happen to give. >> i'm looking into the possibility. that's my plan to make if he stays in canada how long will it take before you might get the kind of help he needs keep you. >> i would say 2-3 years. i can't even get the name of the surgeon that will see him. >> mike: so you have to bear the cost of this? >> s. >> mike: in the other canadians account united states would have an urgent need to get smacked us. >> mike: this is not uncommon. >> not be but. people who have the money and can afford it. >> mike: dr. a final word here, if you had a message for the congress of the united states and even the president, what with that message be to further make a major change in healthcare delivery system here to give. >> slowdown. read the bill and be careful what you wish for.
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an expansion of government might sound tempting, it might sound like it will solve our problems, but look at what's going on in canada. my goodness a person sues the government for her right to october the system because he waited over a year with chronic hip pain for a hip replacement in these growing addicted to morphine. is that the healthcare you want for your cocoa or your father to give. >> mike: doctor, linda gilbert, thank you very much. a lot for us to think about and i hope americans are listening. when we come back we will ask scott rasmussen what americans think about the proposed plan.
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>> mike: if congress votes to pass the healthcare reform bill that could cause -- cost taxpayers have $1 trillion or more. are ready to pay up to cute join me in scott rasmussen. people, scott seal hunt "fox news" all the time to a poll numbers. we're happy you're here. you have fresh bread right out of the oven. tell us what's going on out there in that right now the idea of healthcare reform is something everybody loves. people think our system has room for improvement. what we're seeing in latest polls is the biggest concern is cost. but at 3-1 margin people say that's more important than answers about universal coverage. so far the plans of washington focused on personal coverage not the cost side. that's why the president is having trouble with congress right now. >> mike: speaker policy says everyone loves this. let's listen to it. >> we are very pleased with the support not only of the doctors but as you saw with president obama the other day, the nurses, and we certainly have the support of the american people.
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>> mike: is? our audience is not representative of what she said. what is your point of view. >> elected idea of improving healthcare but the particular plants were saying, not so much. the latest poll on the plan working its way through congress showed 46% are in favor of it, but i% are opposed. those who are opposed have stronger feelings than those who are in favor. the reason is people have a lot to lose. people are concerned. as a trade-off to cute you want health care reform and tax increases or no reform and no tax increases to cute if we ask people that, but a 47-41 margin they are saying we don't want to pass something that cost more in taxes. >> let's answer these questions. the biggest problem with healthcare, what do people think the biggest problem is to cute one of the things is -- was look at on the screen. >> 61%, the cost of healthcare. that's the issue people see as
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number one. 21% say the lack of universal coverage. to finish up that one only 10% said the quality of care is the issue. that's something that's important to realize. when we talk healthcare reform were not talking about reforming healthcare coverage itself were talking about the way we pay for it. >> mike: and expression is better to healthcare reform and the tax rate increase. >> this is close. people say depends on the size of the text entries. read out for 7% don't want to make the trade-off that increases taxes. one reason, most americans to have health insurance. 70% of them say they're happy with the coverage right now. so tax increase doesn't improve their coverage but will cost them more. >> mike: how many people think the tax increase will only be taxed on somebody else to give that's what they're for it some acrimony. 78% of americans say it's likely at healthcare reform passes, we are going to have middle-class tax increases.
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>> mike: people are realizing that will happen to the class people and that will break one of the promises the president made was no middle-class tax increase. the next question is, is it better to have health care reform that requires you to switch your insurance, no health coverage or keep your covert. >> this one shows the big issue is people are afraid of having to give up their own coverage. 54% said that it meant giving up their existing coverage, they do not want to change. only 32% said they prefer healthcare reform. part of the reason for this is even though people think the system may be broken and they're okay with their own coverage, one of the constants in america is that people believe -- polls show by a 2-1 margin, that no matter how bad things are, congress could always make it worse. >> mike: i think that's what we're beginning to think. the rush to get this done so quickly, isn't that reflection that congress is afraid the american people will find out what is in this bill to give.
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>> part of it is a concern about i think letting legislators go home over the recess entering the public reaction. part of it from the obama administration concern is the president's numbers are slipping down. the president's job approval ratings are not at this point in time, but they're down from where they were a month ago and two months ago. as long as the economy is heading south, the president's numbers were the same. that'll make it harder to pass health care reform to return them to knock that it is today. >> mike: it's like they're afraid to let congress called as i have to listen to what their bosses, the american people that like to say to them. is that a good idea to let the congressmen talk to boss us to cute boxes that the people in washington. the buses are the people that come in the districts. maybe that would be a good thing >> maybe it would be a good thing but it's not the way politics are played in washington. one thing we always tend to forget is that elections do have consequences. these people were elected. there were several different promises made, healthcare was talk about but so is the promise to cut taxes for 95% of
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americans and right now those two things are coming into conflict. >> mike: thank you very much. coming up after a comedian tom arnold he opens up about her past as a funny. spite approvint
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machines at racetracks. i'm julie banderas. mike huckabee writer on fox. >> mike: he started his career as a standup comic and since has written sitcoms, acted in movies, was a television shows. this weekend is going back to his roots and for the first time in 20 years is making a special engagement return comedy routine right here in new york city. ladies and gentlemen please welcome, tom arnold. [ applause ] >> how are you, buddy? has to say. >> mike: so glad to have you hear tonight it's good to be here. >> mike: i know your hometown is, ottumwa, iowa. >> thirty people can.
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>> mike: great people in that state a lot like arkansas. when you grew up to do when they think you would be on the stage and do television and movies and all that stuff to cute growing up in iowa is like robin arkansas that world is so far from you stack you have dreams. and you do things in school and things like that but no good out of high school i worked at one of the meatpacking plant for three years. by grandpa worked there 50 years so that was the best job in town. there's another great job. my dad had a place that made industrial nice i went to work at my debts and why they said i might have to fire you. but if we will hire you for now i will hire his kids work for me. but he still has his job. anyway, i dreamed of it or it but i can tv, then people would like me. but it turns out that's not necessarily true. >> mike: if you think that's bad, run for office. if you want to make people mad.
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>> i'm good friends with arnold schwarzenegger, as you know, and wow. i don't know. you go from being the biggest star in the world with everybody love you two right now kind of everybody upset with you. but in california, we have to believe it's like a movie with three acts. at the end of the second act something happens like hypothetical your state goes bankrupt, and it is going to turn around the next 14 months and we will make another movie together. >> mike: i hope he can do it soon. it's a tough time. you probably were a cutup as a kid? >> i didn't fit into any group. my mom left when i was four. i was raised by my dad. a 22-year-old guy with a four euros, a three-year-old and a one-year-old. it's their unusual. he's a great guy and of course he wasn't able to date and eventually ten years later into merida next-door neighbor because he didn't go very far. so i didn't fit in -- i was a little athletic, a little whenever, but at runtime and class i wrote something on the chalkboard in appropriate,
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diarrhea, still can't spell it, but people laughed, and i got paddled. but i liked it. i like the attention. i thought maybe people would like me then. so i think that begin dash cam you still diarrhea to give it is hard. there are aitcheson and stuff it's a crazy word. you got to be a doctor to do it. >> mike: have been great, funny guy on your life, except there was a real painful. of your life if you had to address. want to talk about that, tom, because i think a lot of people out there that expands something like it and don't know where to turn. but you got through it. he had a tough situation when you are what, four years old to cute. >> when i was 30 i got sober. i've been trying for a few years. i was a very bad drug addicts, cocaine and alcohol. alcoholic. finally two summertime, 1989 i got sober and god willing i will make it through today and it will be 20 years in december. but when you get sober yet to
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start sorting things out. you do an inventory of your drinking and drug use and your sexual history and our member site to my therapist between the times i was age of four and seven i had this babysitter, a couple years older, this kid we played this game -- i said i don't know, maybe it's something boys do. i don't know kids do. he's like women, yet a babysitter that was like six or seven and you are -- >> that's weird terminology to research the guy. and see how old he was. he was 19. i started thinking about the game. and it wasn't such a game. and he was a man. at the end of the game and gave me a candy bar. i dad never liked for me to eat candy because i was hyper, but are not, so i never told my dad. posting i kid you not know what sex is. you know what pain is. so i worked on it and six months for my therapist so i didn't go out and strangle the guy, i
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found him. >> mike: he molested as a child you could. >> myself and when i went back to center avenue,," iowa, i found out he -- a lot of the kids. at that time, for a man to say that even as a boy, that another man had sexually abused two a lot of people are afraid that there is sort of a homosexual connotation to that when it's absolutely not true. most pedophiles are not homosexuals. plus you are a kid, you know, it's a lot of guys wouldn't talk about it. but i found a bunch that would. i realized it was a thing -- that this guy had molested so many people, is probably still doing it i researched it adopted for voice, he was married to a church leader, and a big business and i had to invent him. i flew into des moines, went to where he works, and we had our -- >> you confronted the sky to keep you updated cigarette about
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7:00 o'clock in the front of his office the receptionist is like oh my gosh, you are -- i said i'm hear to see so-and-so. >> i'll call him all my gosh you're here. jamaica said no, which is surprising. i hadn't seen them for a long time. and just after mr. walken on the saudi came out of his office as soon as i saw him, i swear i could smell the room he took me into, i could feel, it just scared me it all came back the whole dam that we played and how it was much more violent than -- he came right up to me and i said i'm hear to give you back the pain and shame you caused me as a child. if you try to do that to me now i would break your neck. he came up and jammed his figure in my chest and he said your members are wrong. that's something that somebody that's been confronted says because that sort of textbook. and for a second i thought for. i was scared. the armored way i'm 6-2, i'm a man now, i said no. i grabbed his hand and bend backward and i said i would
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break your neck. i could see the fear in his eyes for the first time. then i left there, i ran out of there, i noticed employees often up and heard this and i felt like this weight off my soul that shoulders went to the state capital purebred studs office, our public and government, a nice guy, i said this guy is going to put up another boy had to stop it. he said tom, i can't. this illegal, statue limitations is up, i've gone to the sheriff -- i said but if they molest one more boy they've molested 250. except i can't think about it it's illegal. i said please. he said tom can you play in québec to california right now we never had this conversation. i was disappointed but i did. i got back two days later by brother chris called and said you know, there's a paperwork snafu with the adoption. and he wasn't able to adopt the kid. >> mike: thank god. somehow don't know what happened, but i'm very grateful to -- and i thought having done everything to cute what about the other kids in his new
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neighborhood. so i had my finance, three in the morning every friday night for a month, but posters, kid height of the guy, his address, his crimes, his face, six blocks around his house. to let everyone of them now. and so you know, -- i feel like i've dealt with it. and last year, this last year did the movie guards of the night where i played it back. >> mike: you play the pedophiles do not have played in. >> mike: will take a break when we come back with tom arnold and his powerful amazing
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>> mike: we're back with tom arnold. we're talking about a painful part of your life. how do you keep from killing a guy when you saw him in des moines to cute. >> two things when i started when i was four it was about when my mother left my mother would leave me with him. when my dad was in charge that babysitters but it still went on because the guy was a neighbor. but you know, when i was seven, my dad had a gun in the house, and i tell you if you have boys and have a gun, another part of the house or the cartridges locked in a lockbox, but we had some voice will find it, and put it together, and take it out. i remember when i was seven i was resisting him, and he said that she came outside my dad pulled up he said that shegog is
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that i can shoot him between the eyes. so the next day, i came out, i put the gun together, got up in the middle of the street, got other kids with me and started yelling for terry to commodity house. he came of the house i said if you ever threaten me or my dad or any of us i'm going to -- i did not use the gun. i could've shut myself in my friends. my dad got a call at work tom dreesen middle district of the gun. my dad came up driving home. i never did explain why. i just didn't know how to do that. >> mike: what to say to parents not. >> i say to parents -- but he said this too. this last thanksgiving -- assist less things giving my dad is 70 so you have to talk to the kids and say in all, this is -- this happens. be very aware of it. when i look at my dad's eyes at thanksgiving, we don't say i love you a lot, so i planned at the hospital where he works
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there is a corridor he puts on his coat i was so nervous it was like that, i just want to say i love you. and what happened and i was a kid, that wasn't your fault. you're my hero. and i -- and i could see the pain in his eyes. even at 70 i thought you know -- but a lot of parents you have to be aware or it because profiles don't look the same. there isn't a picture one. they can beat anybody, anything. and the people that are -- you got to trust people, but you keep your eye on your kids and you talk freely with your kids. you listen to your kids to talk about touching. you talk about what's appropriate. and especially in our case this was the 60s. because kids don't understand and are also threatened -- this is our secret. you are bad too. we're going to keep it a secret, threaten your parents, the people you love, but if you can
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do but appropriate dialog there are ways to do that or it you can protect them and they will talk to and share with you. >> mike: tom, on many occasions you made me laugh. you're a great comedian and actor, but today you did make me laugh. you make me cry. i think i cried for all those kids out there that are being abused and molested and i hope that parents will listen to their children and for those very special warning signs. make you for your candor. thanks much for being here to make thank you very much. >> mike: for the first time a tv, southern rocker bo ♪ well i was shopping for a new car, ♪ ♪ which one's me - a cool convertible or an suv? ♪ ♪ too bad i didn't know my credit was whack ♪ ♪ 'cause now i'm driving off the lot in a used sub-compact. ♪ ♪ f-r-e-e, that spells free credit report dot com, baby. ♪ ♪ saw their ads on my tv
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♪ thought about going but was too lazy ♪ ♪ now instead of looking fly and rollin' phat ♪ ♪ my legs are sticking to the vinyl ♪ ♪ and my posse's getting laughed at. ♪ ♪ f-r-e-e, that spells free- credit report dot com, baby. ♪
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same. pur. good, clean water.
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>> with this guy was awesome blue ♪ ♪ whoredom, gnome two. >> mike: he became a household name as one of the first rockers on "american idol." his success in the music business has continued and is about to release his third album in the fall. please walk them bo bice. welcome to our show today and i thank you for having me, sir. >> mike: i want to talk about this song were going to do because it won't be released until the fall but it can be downloaded now as of today. stakely said the special treats you don't smudge for us. we saved a special thing for the huckabee fans through. you can download off *untran6 .com the new single and only became available today. >> mike: brand-new. the people who watch this show and watching this week will be the first ones to get it but it will be part of an album coming out when did you. >> in the late fall. before the christmas rush.
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>> mike: "american idol" has launched a lot of careers yours included but you almost didn't go on the tryouts. what was that about to cute. >> for me the show was more pop oriented. then my mom had dared me to go before and i was too old. so she again the following year when she found out that up to the age limit it was a bet i wouldn't go down and audition. i bet she wouldn't cry down to orlando with me and here we are today. i don't know that yet. >> mike: you had a great career. people love your music. what's your biggest thrill as a professional musician to give. >> we're blessed to have great fans. that's the coolest thing is saying the fence. i think most of the people that know me, the least thing for music is the greatest thing and that's my wife and kids. that's probably the coolest part of this is experience in all my dreams come true and my wife and kids being able to be part of that.
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>> mike: on road back as the song ended downloadable on *untran6 .com. but stewart. >> chris rock. just like little children ♪ ♪ besides yours and this is mine, and nothing all that in between a broken hearts and shattered dreams ♪ ♪ we don't all live the same life ♪ ♪ we all sleep under the same sky turn one of other changes are going to come ♪ ♪ i can feel it in the wind today ♪ ♪ it's a long, long road back to
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nowhere ♪ ♪ we fight like hell sometimes because the days are gone here ♪ ♪ it's a long, long road back from nowhere can one change is going to come i can feel it in the wind today ♪ ♪ everybody thinks what is wrong with you and me ♪ ♪ when i finally understand one man's got a plan ♪ ♪ but we don't all live the same life ♪ ♪ will sleep under the same
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sky's ♪ ♪ changes can come i can feel it in the wind today ♪ ♪ now it's a long, long road ♪ back to nowhere can one fight like hell sometimes ♪ ♪ weather days are done hear than one it's a long, long road back to nowhere drag on a change is going to come i feel it in the wind today ♪ ♪ ask every child woman and man ♪ to join me hear in the promised land ♪
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♪ it's a long long road ♪ back from nowhere can one we fight like hell sometimes other days we don't care ♪ ♪ no ♪ it's a long, long road back to nowhere ♪ ♪ that changes, come i can feel it in the wind today can one get, it's a long, long road ♪ ♪ a long, long road trip on
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we got a lot of reaction to rodney whaley, a soldier in the combat zone. this from rose. my husband and i had tears in our eyes as you read the efrom the soldier overseas listening to god bless the usa. remember, go to huckabee.com and click on the huckabee report to find out where to hear radio reports three times a da across america. this past weekend america lost a giant and news icon. walter cronkite passed away at the age of 92. he was in many of our living rooms night after night and reported through

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