tv Huckabee FOX News February 28, 2010 11:00pm-12:00am EST
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captioned by closed captioning services, inc. time right here on fox. . >> >> ladies and gentlemen, governor mike huckabee. [applaus [applause] >> hello everybody, welcome. welcome to huckabee from the fox news studios in new york city. well, before we begin let me take note of the strong and devastating earthquake that happened this week in chile. as with any such natural disaster it's some time until the authorities and reporters are able to figure out what kind of damage was done. our heart goes out to our neighbors to the south because even where buildings and homes did not fall, we know how traumatizing it is to go to bed one night and wake up with the
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earth shaking underneath you. to those who have lost loved ones or may be searching for them this weekend we offer our thoughts and prayers and we trust that the community of nations will come to aid the people of chile as they have so many times before and most recently in haiti. we're going to have news updates throughout the program and while you're watching tonight, you can also go to foxnews.com and see the latest fact that we can report. and we know you're going to enjoy tonight's program. tonight congressional candidate dr. robert payne from texas, he says he can make sense of health care reform and then, his perennial battle with weight is no laughing matter, but that hasn't stopped him from poking fun at his plumpness. jeff garland, the fat funny guy from "curb your enthusiasm" is here. also, transparency, why can't washington figure it out? florida state senator tells us
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how his state does it and i hope that our leaders in d.c. are watching. [applaus [applause] >> israel's president says that americans aren't the only ones who aren't big fans of iran's leader ahmadnejad. many of us told you how much you loved fox news anchor kelly wright when he joined the little rockers last month. good news, kelly is back to jam with the band, the little rockers. all of that here tonight. [applause] >> well, my first guest tonight is running for congress in this year's mid term elections. maybe members of the current congress don't understand the issues, but he cuts straight to the chase, welcome the independent account from the west texas 33rd district, d robert payne. >> come on up. [applaus
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[applause] >> this is going to be a very exceptional election year, i'm curious, what was it that first persuaded you to throw your hat in the ring and say i want to go to congress. >> and i guess today more than ever, and it's something that we've seen. something from the beginning to the end. because i say that, i know i did, and look at what we have n now. >> mike: okay. >> that's part of the plan, it's not developed yet so far so good. >> mike: all right. let me try to figure out then, what, what qualifies you to be in congress? >> well, first of all i tried to make it clear that-- what we have with the issues and the way i see it, in light of what we have-- with all of us, when i say all, i'm talking washington and so--
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i mean, i could multi-task i need to do it one thing at a time, sorry, but i'm sincere (laughter) >> i bet you understood everything i said. >> mike: i'm rying to. >> why now? why would you get into a congressional race now? >> as i've said many other times, why not? i think we need to be careful and one thing we need to do is look and -- what was the question? why would you get into a race for congress now after -- any particular reason it that this year motivated you. >> i think it makes sense what i have to say and what i've said so far is a match and what we have, and adds to that with everybody (laughter) >> all right, i've got to let new on little secret here, this gentleman is not really dr.
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robert payne, candidate for the 33rd. >> i'm not running for office. >> mike: aren't you glad? (applaus (applause) >> all right. let me tell you, his real name is derwood fincher, if he looks familiar it's probably because he's known best as mr. double talk. appeared with "candid camera" with alan funk, and is at trade shows. confusing audience was mastery of speaking without saying anything whatsoever and you know what, he's proven he's qualified to be a member of congress. obviously, we've been given a lot of double talk and many member of congress don't make any sensement you can't borrow money you can't pay back, you can't govern without the consent of the governed.
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if congress would listen more than talk they will know that the governed aren't consenting to the proposals on them. double talk is great in comedy, not good in congress. the sad thing is his double talk makes as much sense as the health care debate. that's my view and you can e-mail me, when you go there, click on the section at mike huckabee.com. it's great to have here here. i couldn't hold character at all times. i was trying. you have a book i find amazing, once you step in elephant manure you're in the circus forever. >> that was a title given to me by my grandfather, my grandmother used to say, remember, if you don't stand for something ail fall for anything. that's what they all used to say. >> used to hear it. >> my grandfather would say, but
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remember once you step in elephant maneuver you're in the circus forever. >> mike: before today, he conducted a survey with folks on the street outside our studios, let's watch. >> let's start with a great place to begin. tell your name what you do and why and where. >> my name is anthony and i live and work in new york city, c.p.a. i work for a real estate company. >> so you do numbers. >> yes, i am. let me ask you this, anthony and we have an idea (inaudible) here in the city? >> i'm sorry? >> the city, is that-- >> yes. >> number two, florida go to three. last thing i want to ask you this what we've seen here i guess adds that to-- in your own words with the economy? >> well, right now the economy, i feel, is probably a little bit worse off than what our poll tigs, elected politicians
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telling us. >> do you think at that to be part of that, too, in, right? >> yes, absolutely. bingo, we're talking with jane. >> lisa. >> whatever. lisa let me start out and asking what you have in your own words. >> well, i believe currently the administration has spent way too much time on health care. >> you say that i'd like you to-- look at the camera and ask me this, what we have in that, too, and i say that again because i hurt me and has that occurred yet, i don't know, i don't know. >> i'm sorry, would you tell me the question again? >> start from the beginning. >> okay, just repeat what i said. >> i am, yeah. >> oh, okay. >> i believe that-- >> i was alone go ahead. >> i believe the current administration spent too much time on health care. >> that's what i was saying, i was thinking what. we're talking with todd and patsy; is that right. >> kathy. >> so close and i'm talking to them. what would be-- (inaudible) give me a spot on
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that? >> i'm sorry, i didn't understand what. >> just one down. what would be and really adds that to a-- what we see here with the economy, yeah, that and-- >> the economy's scary for us, we have kid and our daughter is working. >> and that's good because that's-- but todd on that, i guess what she's saying, right, i mean, that's what they usually do. >> well, we're fortunate that we have been okay, but we're concerned for friends that are ott of work and been out of work a long time. >> exactly. close out by asking you both to look at the camera and answer me this, what if any, indeed how much would be i guess considered to be what we've seen so far, a lot of people, when i say a lot i mean some and yes and others said no, so where do you come in on that one? >> well, we feel that the economy is-- >> an idiot, that's the part
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that i, what we have, too, i mean, everybody has said yes, goes back to the party. (laughter) >> say yes. >> yes, yes. >> i love, love personal opinions and their views, thank you very much. (laughter) >> you know, the audience some of the people are not going to speak to you afterwards. i want to ask you, you've been doing this for many, many years and do some people think you might be a member of congress. >> i did a crews recently, 4,000 in the audience they were stunned and i asked them what were you thinking. they were thinking, my word, it really is just insanity! and then they were laughing when if he found out who i was. it's scary what i do. and we i guess, too, right (laughter) >> the book is called once you step in elephant manure you're in the circus forever and joining us the co-author of this
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with great funny stuff by derwood. thank you, great to have you here. >> thank you. >> coming up he jokes about his weight, but serious about-- star and executive producer about h.b.o. hit "curb your enthusiasm", but first i'll take questions by the audience. if you had pinched the commercial what would you pitch at? >>
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(applause) >> in our studio audience, a big part of the show. once in a while when i'm feeling really, really brave we let them have their say and we'll let them today. we'll go up in the stands. josiah from st. cloud, florida. >> good morning, what would you have done if you had been invited to the health care summit. >> mike: i would have talked specifically about things that should have been done. for example, there's a way to cover people, not a mere expansion of medicaid, you have to have buy in on the part of the patient. medicaid is not a bad program, a lot of people denigrate it. it's helped a lot of poor people, but if you do an expansion, call it completely different and make it so with people with developmental
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disabilities and severe issue that are very expensive and can't get into the private market could get into. subsidize even then have a buy in on the part of the consumer. that's missing in a lot of the proposals. when you give people something for nothing they never appreciate it and they overuse it. when you have some shared responsibility you then manage it more carefully and the key thing is put not only an ownership on a personal level of every health care policy, but make it personal and make it part portable so it's not tied to your employer, it's tied to you. those are two things and i could speak for hours, but that's the first thing we ought to do. that's one thing that universally, everybody agrees needs to be fixed, it can be, but it can't be with everybody fighting and just getting on either side of the room and screaming. so, i'll let that be for now and go to susan from north port, new york. >> hi, governor huckabee, how are you? what was the most fun or favorite interview you've ever
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done on the show? >> i've had so many that i've enjoyed. probably, you know, again, i can't just one, but one of the most pleasant things we ever did was have neil is a sedaka on twice and to play with someone who's been doing this for 60 years. or maybe playing with lynyrd skynyrd, big for a southern boy on a guitar. i've had a thousand of those. hi, greg. >> aid like to know if the little rockers are going on tour. >> if the little rockers are going on tour? we've got to get invited. here is the thing, what happens, people will say do you guys take requests, we do, but we're going to play anyway (laughter) . we would love to go on tour and maybe somebody would have us and thank you for thinking it's a good idea. i think it's a great idea and maybe a road show of the little rockers. [applause]. >> . >> mike: thank you audience,
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thank you. well, he is a hysterical heavy guy on h.b.o.'s "curb your enthusiasm." while's fine with weight being the butt of a joke on the show, he wants to have walmart's $10 90-day generic prescriptions... don: ...no matter where you live. don: plus get free shipping on over 3,000 other prescriptions. don: call 1-800-2-refill for your free home delivery. save money. live better. walmart. hi, may i help you? yes, i hear progressive has lots of discounts on car insurance. can i get in on that? are you a safe driver? yes. discount! do you own a home? yes. discount! are you going to buy online?
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>> your a the loser. >> you're the loser. >> tell him. >> out goes y-o-u. you give the kidney, you give the kidney. >> no, no, stupid, you don't know how to play. >> no, no. >> y-o-u. you're out! >> hilarious show. well, his life long struggle with weight included a stroke caused by type two diabetes and at his heaviest weighed about 320 pounds, but he's starting to get the upper hand and now when he steps on the scale, the dow reaches the mid 200 range and gives his comical take on it in a brand new book called "my footprint, carrying the weight of the world", ladies and gentlemen, please welcome jeff garlin. >> hello, jeff. >> hello, governor. >> mike: great to have you here. >> thank you, thank you. thank you, sir. >> mike: you are an incredibly
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funny guy and you do this improve show with larry david. >> yes. >> mike: and then you write about a serious topic in a funny way in this book called my footprint. >> yes. >> mike: how do you make funny stuff out of health issues? >> well, i don't try. that's the first thing. i just write about my-- it's really funny to read about somebody failing, you know? and when you try and diet, you're bound to fail. diets don't work, so, once you hit that failure point there's some good humor. >> i really identified with the book, i, too, as described here am a food addict. i've gone offense the battle again and it's one of the most difficult challenges i think many of us face. >> very much so. >> mike: even with a huge crisis in the country now particularly with children. yes. >> mike: but you had a crisis, unlike many people, you had a stroke, a very young man. >> yeah, i was a young man and had heart problems when i was younger and to have a stroke at
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37, but you know, the thing where logic has nothing to do with weight loss, you'd think that after a stroke, boom, i would have done something right away. that's when i began to balloon to 320, after a stroke. >> mike: what do you think triggered that sense of okay, i've got to change, i'll change, i'll get bigger? >> anxiety. i eat because of feelings, good or bad, i want to shove them down and when you have a stroke you have a lot of feelings and you eat, eat, eat. it wasn't until-- i'm not kidding you, till i wrote the book and i'm writing the book and feeling the pressure from writing the book and eating more. and you know, you know what the book is about. so as i'm writing down what i'm doing to myself, i'm going, you really have a problem, you're screwingy. and that's when i admitted that i was a food addict and once i admitted i was an addict, i approached it like an alcoholic. i haven't had sugar in over a
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year, but that first taste of a cookie, not even a cookie, a taste of a cookie, i'm gone. same thing with your first drink, now, so i'm real serious like that and it worked like a charm. >> mike: i really can relate to the fact that a person who has a food addiction has to virtually go through a detox much like an alcoholic would go through the time where you go through several weeks of simply being completely off the things that trigger, not just appetite, but trigger the feelings and all of those emotions that come with that. >> i would have to say the first three weeks of going off sugar, i haven't had fast food for over a year, too, that was a little bit difficult. paled in comparison to the sugar. didn't sleep at all for like two, three days at a time. >> mike: wow. >> was crabby, headaches it felt like somebody was punching me in the head. and just, out and out, a horrible, horrible time, heart pal pi--
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palpitations. but it's like someone took blie blinders off. my energy, i wrote about it, but-- >> in fact, the book, one of the things i found interesting, jeff, it isn't like a book up here, i've done it, it's almost like a diary. a whole lot of it is here is the journey, boy, i messed up today. >> and a lot is boy, i messed up today, which we all do. we all mess up every day and that's why whenever i tell people about the book, not a how-to. not a how-to. it's my journey and i think i was remotely successful. >> i think it's interesting because you said it's not a how-to, you're right, it's a description, but anyone who has battled with food addictions or weight issues will find themselves reading the book and saying, boy, noi this guy. he is me and there may be another book to read to figure
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out how to fix it all. this book gives them a sense i know this guy. as you read the book, i learned how to live at pretty kin, the pr pritkin longevity center. there's no secret to lose weight, no special pill, there's nothing except it's really, really extraordinarily hard, but you can do that. >> mike: i said if it wasn't a food a hundred years ago, it's not a food todayments that should be a rule. did you get that one passed? that's a good one. an orange is an orange, my friend. but it's an orange-- >> what is this and you read the ingredients, all of those, you know, if there's more than like four or five ingredients, do you really want to? >> it's not a food, it's a food product and we are going to be back with jeff and talk a little more about the journey and the comedy career, what it is to be funny and how to deal with some
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issues you've dealt with. if you go away you'll miss something you don't want to miss, stay with us, jeff garlin (female announcer) stressless is designed to be the most comfortable line of furniture in existence. it's a motion line of furniture that conforms to your body and supports your head, neck, and back seamlessly in any position, leaving your entire body feeling rested and rejuvenated. [upbeat jazz arrangement] ♪ right now, you'll receive a stressless accessory free of charge when you purchase one of our recliners. ♪ call now... ...featuring our entire stressless line. give yourself the gift of ultimate comfort, and where better to find it than from stressless,
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>> chully in a military curfew as the got. tries to restore order. it is being called one of the most powerful quakes ever recorded anywhere on the globe. 200 thousand are believed dead and the tole expected to climb as they search for more victims. the quake severely damaged a half million homes. near the epicenter looters are hitting supermarkets for food and water. they are urging americans to avoid tourism and all nonessential travel to chill li. it triggered sun tsunami fears
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across the pacific. only the cost tal communities along the epicenter were washed away. now back to "huckabee." for your latest headlines log on to foxnews.com. to foxnews.com. [applause] >> we're back with jeff garlin from h.b.o.'s curb your enthusiasm. recently director kevin smith was tossed off a southwest airlines flight. said he was too big after they seated him. >> right. >> mike: and i really felt for him. i thought that, you know, this is tough. your thought on that? >> i felt for him, too, that's tough especially after they seat him, but i'm confused was his fat like pushing into the person next to him? i'm confused, because if you fit in there how can they throw you off? i mean, if he had to have the thing up he said, i'm sorry, i'm sweaty and the person coulding this is terrible, but you know, i felt horrible for him and if
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he was already seated and fine, that's crazy. >> mike: and i'm on planes all the time a lot of people i'd throw off the plane it's not because they're big, because they're obnoxious and-- >> oh, my. >> mike: or drop it bag on my head and throw them off. >> nobody cares about that. people with dogs running around. >> mike: at your heaviest did you find people -- there was a certain level of prejudice or-- . no, i mean, yes, people have that toward fat people, there's a natural disdain, but i think it's much harder for women who are fat than men. i really think that if you're a fat woman it really all comes down on you pretty hard. fat man, we're a big guy. big gal doesn't have the same ring to it, does it? no, so. >> mike: all right, let me ask you about the comedy, you've been a director, a producer, comedian doing stand up all offense the place. is that scary getting in front of people and never know if
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they're going to react and laugh to you? >> and it's about, is it scary to govern a state? it probably is. >> mike: it's scary for the people, they were the one who were really afraid. >> no, it not scary at all for me, it's extraordinarily, i don't want to say easy because i work really, really hard. >> mike: yeah. >> but, no, it's what i do. i'd be scared if i had to fly a plane today. >> mike: i'd be scared if i was on the plane you're flying since you probably don't have a pilot's license. my god, you should be screaming if you're on the plane and i'm flying it. no, it's really quite enjoyable and i'm getting asked a lot if my losing weight will affect my comedy. >> mike: yeah. >> and no, i've never relied on fat jokes per se. if i ever talked about being fat on stage, it was in a way that i was telling a story of something that happened to me or how feel about something, not belittling myself although when i do perform if anyone looks stupid,
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it's me. >> mike: when you thought about being a comedian how old. >> eight years old. thrown out of class a lot? >> yes. >> mike: i knew that, i knew that. >> but all good natured stuff. i was never disrespectful to my teachers if you can believe that. >> mike: i don't believe that. >> i was disruptive is what i was. i was eight years old and my parents, i was living in chicago, i was from chicago, and my parents took me to see jimmy duran tee at the palmer house in chicago and i watched him, so mystified by him and the audience it was so exciting and on the drive home i said to my parents, is that a job. they said, yes, that's a job. i said that's the job i want. >> mike: at eight years old. at eight years old, yeah, yeah yeah. >> mike: it's work out well for you. >> it has, i'm with you!
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>> audience that's supposed to be good. thank you very much. >> no, that was a hearty compliment. >> mike: i want to tell you i appreciate you coming on, your book is great and something our audience just found out, every one of you is going to get a copy of jeff's book "my footprint". [applause] >> look how easy it is to make him happy. jeff, thank you so very much, what a pleasure, great to have you here. . >> thank you. >> mike: coming up, do you know where your tax dollars are going? probably not, but if you live in florida you could. we are going to show you how that state's push for complete transparency could happen.
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huckabee report three times daily. listed the fastest growing in the past decade. go to mike huckabee.com and click on the huckabee report. the sunshine state is letting the sunshine in. my next guest helped implement a system that lets taxpayers know where every last time of the state budget is being spent and all you've got to do is click on a website to see. >> please women florida state senator. thank you for being here. >> thank you. >> mike: i met you through a very good mutual friend and one of the things that immediately became interesting, you were always looking for ways to find some innovations to make government more efficient. you and some of the your colleagues in the florida legislation came up with transparency. >> the key is we're the sunshine state. and make sure how everyone can see how we spend the money, it's
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not our money. we put together a budget on the excel spread sheet and put it out to the people. >> click on transparency florida.gov and you can navigate around it and find out where all the money of the florida budget goes. you can ask how much does this guy ma i can who works in an agency. what contract. pretty much anything. >> absolutely, because again, it's their money. we spend 66 billion dollars in a year and we want to make sure they can click there and give their ideas because this is a first step process, transparency 1.0, we want to go to the next step, but contract and local and state government. anybody can do it, especially washington d.c. >> you're the only state that's done neg like this. the president campaigned on transparency in government. we've heard people say we need more transparency, you have it. could this be reported to the federal budgetment can would he see the budget like florida residents can see yours. >> like a former governor, state
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is like a mini federal government. they have the agencies. we can do it in florida, we can do it anywhere. it's a way to restore trust in government by opening up our books, we're not perfect, but only one person who walked this earth is perfect and we know. make sure to open up and we want to satisfy our customers, our voters and they are going to give those ideas to us and bring it to washington. don't just walk, too much of that. and let's acten that's what we're doing in florida. >> probably it's amaze to go people in florida, they look at a state budget and states do, i always think three things states do, educate, medicate and incarcera incarcerate. look at the medicaid, and prison budget. 91% of the state budget. in florida as i recall, it's almost like 70-something percent or 80. >> and they drive their budget. medicaid you spoke about earlier, it paralyzes our budget and it's one size fits all. let's change it around.
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in florida people are giving innovative ideas to reduce the budget. if washington d.c. will only have the opportunity to have the flexibility like when it was in 1996. >>. >> mike: how much pushback from bureaucracy, people in the agency say we don't want everybody to know what they're doing. was there push back? i know the answer, but-- >> governor you're a smart man and it wasn't just the agency heads, but local governments as well and folks who had the good ole boy system. the way you break it up, shine the light on it. bad ideas will wither and die in the sunshine and we'll open it up. we'll make mistakes, but show where we spend the money and that's the way we improve government. >> mike: the site is up and running and people can take a look. what do you to to make it more user friendly. >> i think every day we mails, hey how about this, i had trouble finding that.
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as i move into the senate presidency next year, one of the number one goals how to we open to up to the people of florida. and then we can spend more on schools, health care and tax relief because we need to get this economy going. all i care about job creation, this is one way to do it. >> mike: one thing that would be evident, if the federal government is not haved, there are 49 states that could be that could use the program to bring on transparency. have you ever had her state legislators, maybe members of congress say we're interested in looking at this. they sure have and that's the direction, we want to be the state of innovation and sunshine and we're seeing states like texas take a look at it and new york state given their budget problems, new jersey, looking how do we do it better and how do we contrast ourselves from washington d.c., from the rhetoric to the action in florida. >> mike: can you give me an example when people look at this has this resulted in somebody saying oh, we've got to make changes in the way we budget.
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are people going to see savings and efficiency. >> absolutely. dms, the group that has agencies set up and put them under the microscope and paying too much to rent property to make the agencies work and we've seen that, that resulted in big savings and we can put the money where it matters not in bureaucracy. >> mike: you have he had criticism this is costly to implement because it takes several million dollars to create the website and-- >> that's still there or waning away. >> again, it's sunshinen what the president campaigned on. all we're asking to do is match the rhetoric in my area of space coast, save those jobs, same thing here we'll put the money where it counts, improving people's lives or giving tax relief. >> mike: the senator from florida, thank you. predominantly what you're doing in florida. hope the rest of the country will get it and thinking about efficiency can happen, it starts
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with a little sunshine. thank you very much for the inside in the transparency in the government. [applause] >> iran refuses to cooperate and continues to defy warnings of the united states and international community saying that it plans to build nuclear power plants inside mountains to protect them from air strikes. how do we deal with a brash dictator that threatens the entire world? israeli president shimon peres says resistance starts from within. my interview with him next. ah, auto! sir? finding everything okay? i work for a different insurance company. my auto policy's just getting a little too expensive. with progressive, you get the "name your price" option, so we build a policy to fit your budget. wow! the price gun. ♪ ah! wish we had this. we'd just tell people what to pay. yeah, we're the only ones that do. i love your insurance! bill? tom? hey! it's an office party!
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feel the same way about their leader as a majority of europeans and westerners do. many of us in the united states know there's a dinners between the iranian leadership. i remember in after 9/11 there was dancing in the streets in many capitals they were lighting cappedles in tehran. the people of tehran is not hostile to the fights. clearly the leadership is. recently with the advent of the uprising and the thought that that's beginning to take hold, what opportunities does that present for the iranian people to maybe prevent some type of military action, having to take place to prevent nuclear proliferation. proliferation. >>
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but i want to tell you my opinion about it. iran has about 50% and i know it is, but not-- there are a 30% unemployment. the young people are up in arms, dissatisfaction and a good look inside what's happening he's a table dictator and the pictures, i think they started without us encouraging them. the revolt came from the depth of their own culture from the feeling of their own people that a courageous man--
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let's stand on the other side clearly without creating an impression of the world to call them to anything. it's their own call. they're ashamed testify such terrible persons ahead of their nation so i think-- because they carry with them a culture of their own, they tear own understanding and it's interesting that the two main piece of parties it this revolt are the youngsters and the women. the youngsters take away from them the future and the women takes away from them their rights and one thing, the mistakes in addition to all the mistakes exaggerated the dictator, exaggerated strengths of hitler, the strengths of stalten of mussolini and let's exaggerate with ahmadnejad--
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>> you can watch my entire unedited interview with mr. peres, at foxnews.com/huckabee. the coming up, little rockers will be jamming with a marvin gaye classic. kelly wright is going to do the (announcer) metamucil with psyllium fiber supports your health in 4 ways it helps your natural cleansing process helps lower cholesterol. promotes overall well being and provides a good source of natural fiber try metamucil, in powders, capsules and fiber singles. owdon: ...no matter where you walmart's $live.-day generic prescriptions... don: plus get free shipping on over 3,000 other prescriptions. don: call 1-800-2-refill for your free home delivery. save money. live better. walmart. about all the discounts boswe're offering. i've got. i some catchphrases that'llideas make these savings even more memorable. gecko: all right... gecko: good driver discounts. now that's the stuff...?
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boss: how 'bout this? gecko: ...they're the bee's knees? boss: or this? gecko: sir, how 'bout just "fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance." boss: ha, yeah, good luck with that catching on! anncr: geico. fifteen minutes could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
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(applause) >> well, i'm sure you have been watching the weather along the northeast and new york has been hit especially hard. 26 inches of snow in central park on friday this week. do you want to know what two feet of snow looked like in new york. this is what two feet of snow locked like in new york. don't say new yorkers are not creative and sometimes a little crazy, too. well, before we bring on the little rockers i want to update you on the art works that twin brothers jerrien terry lynn painted here on our show. the beautiful patriotic theme
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painting, spirit, 8,300 dollars on ebay and through my partnership with the wanna play fund all the proceeds from the action will help provide musical instruments for kids across america. it's time for one of our favorite parts of the show, kelly wright to feature on a marvin gaye tune, let's do it "what's going on" >> that's right. ♪ oh ♪ mother, mother, there too many of you crying ♪ ♪ my brother, brother, brother ♪ ♪ there's far too many of you dying ♪ ♪ you know we've got to find a way to bring some loving here
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today ♪ ♪ father, father we don't need to escalate ♪ ♪ yes war is not the answer, only love can conquer ♪ ♪ you know we've got to find a way to bring some loving here today ♪ ♪ take it light, take its time, don't punish me with brutality ♪ ♪ come on, talk to me and you will see what's going on ♪ ♪ what's going on ♪ what's going on ♪ tell me what's going on ♪
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