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tv   With All Due Respect  MSNBC  August 31, 2016 3:00pm-4:01pm PDT

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stories. this isn't a media story so much about politicians hiding from invent questions. it is fine to stay away from report ferries you're not in the public eye. if you're a politician, part of your job is to talk to reporters. whether you like it or not, many reporters talk to taxpayers. many reporters talk to voters. and if you refuse to talk to reporters, you're refusing to talk to voters. so think about that. that's all for tonight. we'll be back tomorrow. "with all due respect" starts 15 seconds late. i'm nicole wallace. >> and i'm john. we respect donald trump was eating something a little more festive. >> burger king's new whopperito.
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>> a whopperito. have you seen it? you have to have it. we have donald trump's big immigration speech, hillary clinton's pre buttal and the whole enchilada. showing that hillary's unfavorability rating sare creeping up to trump's level. the early awaited address in phoenix tonight, trump sat down with mexican president nieto for private discussion about that very issue. in a statement afterward, trump called substantive and direct before launching into a scripted, subdued but still sharp warning about open borders and open trade. >> in both mexico and the united states, this is a humanitarian disaster. having a secure border is a sovereign right and mutually
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beneficial. we recognize and respect the right of either country to build a physical barrier or wall on any of its voters to stop the illegal movement of people, drugs and weapons. cooperation toward achieving the shared objective, and it will be shared, of safety for all citizens is paramount to both the united states and to mexico. >> trump went on to say that and he pena had not discussed who would pay for that bordered wall. earlier today in a speech in cincinnati, hillary clinton instructed voters to pay no attention to the man south of the border telling them not to confer trust in trump just because he met with a world leader. >> meeting with countries was my job every day as secretary of state. it is more than a photo op.
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it takes consistency and reliability. and it certainly takes more than trying on make up for a year of insults and insinuations. this trip, his tilly arranged, hap hazard. did it pay off? >> you have to separate out the stage craft. voters that have not been paying close attention like we have, people have the kids home from school may have turned on the tv and seen donald trump differently than he usually looks. he was in a foreign country standing shoulder to shoulder with a foreign leader. hillary clinton was right. i think jeb bush would agree. in terms of where the race stands, they are trying on
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appeal to a very small group of vote here's don't like either one of them. it is a group of vote here's are not sold on either one. they may have seen a new donald trump in appearance. >> trump made your old friend jeb bush look hyperactive in terms of his performance. i think the reason nominees go to foreign countries is to try look presidential is that a sense of what it might look like. >> that's why trump went. some went to learn who the other leaders are that they might work. >> it turns out that's why trump went today. to me there were a lot of questions the goals. it turned out to give impression that he could have a calm, sober, subdued appearance. i don't think whether coming into this immigration speech, whether trump's core supporters look at that and say, that's the tough talking donald trump who will take it to the mexicans.
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i don't know if they look at that. for those in the middle of the electorate and worry that he is such a hot head that anything he does outside of american soil or on american soil will blow up, that was at least not a blowing up. >> in terms of where he is, there are some voters out there who the fact that he didn't show up in a foreign country and get run out of the place. that was a good day for trump. >> we're setting the bar low. let's be clear. we're setting the bar low but that's sometime where you have to set the bar. now we move to the second topic which is the more important one. >> later tonight in arizona, donald trump will at long last share his tbd immigration plan on how he will handle the 11 million undocumented immigrants in the united states. some say he may be off the posture of deportations by refusing to call it a reversal
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or even softening. trump will likely double down on his view of this sanctioned cities. but trump is walking a high wire as he tries distance himself from his primary proposals. how long can he pull off this balancing act between pleasing his base and winning over the undecided? >> the problem for him, if you listen to what kellyanne conway has been saying, to what donald trump jr. has been saying, there is a softening happening here. he is not going to get up on stage and say i want to bring the deportation force and kick out 11 million people out of the country. so if that softening has taken place but it is a vague softening. there's no detail. he tries to stay away from that issue. talk about the wall and enforcing the wall. i don't think it helps in that all the things he said in the past are still there. the clinton campaign is already making clear, they are going to keep reminding voters day in and
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day out. what he said about mexican rapists, the deportation force. it is never in the past anymore. the past is always still present. >> and i think the notion he will be labeled as being the same place where marco rubio and jeb bush. were he didn't just have a policy. he destroyed them. he ridiculed them. he called them soft. he also insulted paul ryan for his posture on immigration. so his attacks on immigration were among harshest that he leveled. the fact that he is now documenting the same positions he had. he nunderstands a little more o this is interesting at best. >> kellyanne conway onning at the television said this will be no reversals. she said history began with his acceptance speech in cleveland. that's when he became the nominee. he didn't mention the deportation force then. so she wants to set the clock in july.
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i don't think that washes. >> exactly. >> he has to clear it up. he either has to say i'm for a deportation force, what to do with the 11 million, or he has to say, listen, i was wrong before. i don't think he will do either one of those things. it will continue to haunt him going forward. >> and i think the political question becomes, does it dampen the peter's and the excitement. >> she is the litmus test on hard line immigration policy. so while trump was doing his thing, hillary clinton started the morning by rolling out another national security endorsement. this time it was the former stand secretary of defense, then in the shining city of cincinnati, clinton tried to reclaim the mantle of american exceptionalism which republicans
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have sfenl last eight years claiming barack obama and his democratic party have band onab as a guiding principle. >> my possibly has said very clearly that he thinks american exceptionalism is insulting to the rest of the world. in fact, when vladimir putin of all people criticized american exceptionalism, my opponent agreed with him saying, and i quote, if you're in russia, you don't want to hear that america is exceptional. well, maybe you don't want to hear it but that doesn't mean it's not true. >> so nicole, simple question. how effective do you think clinton was at counter programming against all this trump news? >> if you're on the campaign that is confident enough that your base is sufficiently excited about you, that you're
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going after republicans and that's what hillary clinton is doing with this message. then you're on stronger terrain. and there's no doubt she is on stronger twrain this message. i think the message, on commander in chiefness, they have made the xas there are bipartisan people who support her over him. they need to now extend the argument to the economy. her economic message is very polarizing. republicans and small business owners still fear a more liberal policy agenda than even we had when president obama this -- >> we did see last week they rolled out the koings council. it bears saying a little more about american exceptionalism. it is the case that for eight years, i think totally unfairly, republicans have said barack obama doesn't believe in it. he tried on say multiple times that he does believe in it. to hear hillary clinton just grab that and say, you know
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what? not only, i'm not defending barack obama. i'm saying i believe in american exceptionalism and donald trump doesn't believe in american exceptionalism. it is not just about national security. it is another place in which she is trying to say to republicans, all those suburban republican college educated voters, she's saying to them he is not a normal republican. it is not okay if you're a normal republican to vote for this guy. in many ways, first last week in the alt-right speech about race and bigotry but here on foreign policy, this guy is way off, outside the republican main stream. >> and i think you talked about it in questions of race. she talked about national security. if she can seal the deal on questions of the economy, then i think she is on very firm footing going into the base. >> and i think it is harder to do that. i think rolling out the endorsements helps. you have the big names. they're lot bigger name than national security. >> they help because she's in a
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hole. because her image has become a polarizing figure. she was not seen the way she is as a senator from new york. she is seen as a polarizing figure. >> when we come back, we'll head to new york city. she spent summer binge-watching. soon, she'll be binge-studying. get back to great. this week 50% off all backpacks. office depot officemax. gear up for school. gear up for great. get between you and life's dobeautiful moments.llergens
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joining us, bloomberg reporter eric martin. tell us what went down today many mexico city. >> absolutely extraordinary press conference today between donald trump and mexican president nieto. they greed a lot of things or said in the press conference that they agreed on a lot of things but at the same time they skirted a lot of the hard issues. president nieto said that trump's rhetoric has hurt the mexican people. perhaps a nod to the comments about rapists and criminals.
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donald trump said that they discussed the wall and each country's right to secure its borders. but they didn't discuss who would pay for the wall. so a lot of the things that have really damaged the inflection points weren't on the agenda. a surprise go meeting and really an interesting one but we didn't really see the clash and some of those tensions on display. >> so president pena nieto has compared donald trump to, talking about him as hitler, in the context of mussolini. how happy did he seem to be sharing the stage today from your perspective with donald trump? >> president pena nieto looked very focused. very serious. we got a curveball at the end where we were told there would be no questions. then at the end of donald trump's statement. some of the reporters covering
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him started asking questions. as donald trump is wont to do, he began answering them and president nieto didn't quite know what to do with that. he may have a longer track record at this point than hillary clinton in terms of not holding a press conference, at least in mexico. he will sometimes speak to the press extemporaneously. but i can't remember the last time we had a press conference in mexico. he answered a little bit and talked about that rhetoric which i just mentioned but it was an uncomfortable moment in terms of donald trump as he often does, going off script. >> what struck me was donald trump's comments about nafta. he said it turned out better for mexico than the u.s. do you have any reporting in mexico about, is the government of that opinion? was there anything in this meeting or coming out of it, about partnering with trump and taking fresh look at nafta? >> that is certainly one thing
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mexican government does not agree with donald trump. the mexican government is always highlighting the benefits to the u.s. from this relationship. they talked about how much u.s. content goes into every dollar of exports from mexico. they talk about the benefits of cross border production changes, supply chains, marchly the auto industries. a big one in mexico. so that's the point of view, when trump and nieto talk about modernizing nafta, i'm not sure they're talking about the same thing. >> when the news broke this morning that donald trump was headed to mexico city, there were the usual reports that there might be protests. outrage in the streets among mexicans about trump's arrival. how much of that actually made out? >> we didn't see a lot of that but there was scant time to
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organize anything. behind me is the monument and people who might have opposed this had less than 12 hours, a little over 12 hours really to organize things once the news came out. we saw people going to twitter and trump is doing badly in the polls so mexican who's oppose him saying this could breathe new life in his campaign. we haven't seen a lot in terms of people out in the streets really showing that opposition and that criticism of pena nieto who by the sway suffering from record low popularity for a mexican president. >> one of the benefits of doing this quickly. >> note anyone, we are smarter for your reporting. up next, a preview of trump's immigration speech and what we can expect from hillary clinton's campaign. i'm a fine arts major. nobody really believes that i take notes this way, but they actually make sense to me. i try to balance my studying
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reporting, he is going to say what on the important matters of controversy? >> what i'm told is he is going to lay out some of the things he just mentioned in that press conference in mexico. you heard him talk about how he has those five goals. and i'm told that was a foreshadow of what he would say. i'm in phoenix and i was driving by the venue and the place is already surrounded by a huge line of people. really excited to go see him talk about this. what he will talk about, securing the border. no surprise. he will talk about cracking down on illegal immigration. he will talk on nafta. he will talk about stopping flow of drugs into this country. he will talk about keeping manufacturing wealth in this country. he will go through some of the things he ticked through just now in that press conference. >> what are you hearing internally about how we came to land on the word "softening" which is fast becoming my least favorite word in the english dictionary. they didn't seem ready to change
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the policy. it seals like kellyanne and the communicators wanted him to soften his image. what do you hear about the debate around that word? >> i'm not so sure that was his word that came out of his thinking. someone else suggested it to him and he agreed. what he was trying to do. he was trying to say the exact same things he's been saying in the primary but saying it in a way that is not offensive to general election voters. so he had that softening, hardening quote where he said i'm kind of doing both which is fairly typical. what his campaigners don't want him to do is to really upset and be abrasive to those voters. every speech he gives, he gives a direct appeal to black voters and hispanic voters. it is every single speech and they are really hammering that hard. >> today clinton campaign put out a video which is one of the weirder pieces of art i've seen in a while.
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>> art? >> they would appreciate that. it was a rorshack test. whatever trump says, it doesn't matter. we'll hold him accountable for what he said before. specially on deportation and take edge off. >> i think they are concerned. not just the dwraegs issues but in general, they worry about now that people are tuning in. people will tune in even more after labor day. whatever he says now may be all that sticks in voters' heads when they go to the polls and they are concerned what he is saying now may not reflect what he, one, believes or intends to do. really what she keeps saying over and over again and she's been saying for months. look at what he's done over the course of his life. the course of his career. don't just hear what he does
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now. pits people should pay attention, that people will hear whatever he says so i'm not going to deport everybody. and they're going to go with that. they're going to make their decision based on those sayings and that may not be as favorable to secretary cleanse with what he said a year ago. >> is there anything about whether to attack him, whether to page him as the most streel version of a republican? to do what she did today, to pain him as something totally outside the right/left ideological spectrum, to treat him as other, and to bring into the camp. >> the focus has been on the other. with the speech with the alt-right last week. there's been some debate. there is concern that if she says he is different than the republican main stream. she's not doing anything to then democrats. and you're seeing this already
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in some of the polls. where she is leading. like in florida, she has a couple point lead. in polling averages but marco rubio has the lead in the senate race. so there is a challenge to thread the needle. saying here is this guy. but look. a lot of these candidates are doing the same thing. and he has pulled them outside the main stream. if you are main stream, come with me. >> we have to go quick here. >> donald trump, they made whole big feel about how they're going on with this ad buy. some ads have been bought. some not in virginia and colorado. would you know anything about whether there may be softening on the question of that ad buy? the big ad buy? >> no. they are not softening their ad buy. they've started advertising in about five states and they're
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hitting sycamore very quickly. they do intend to pursue. >> two new polls in wisconsin. a marquette law school poll with only 3 over trump. another with only a 5-point lead. that's wisconsin. how freaked out will brooklyn be when they see those numbers? >>? >> some ways they will pretend they're not freaked out at all. and they will discount them. when they fundraise, they will say oh-oh, we're in trouble. i think in the upper midwest states where there is a big white population, they have been concerned all complaining the numbers they're seeing through the summer would not actually stick up come the fall. >> both jennifers, thank you. you're great. up next, a the colt classic. we have ann coulter in the the studio.
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. in our next guest ann cowler needs no introduction. in my parents' house, she is considered a folk hero. it is called in trump we trust. >> what lovely parents you must have. >> i don't know if they're current. i'll start by reading a paragraph from the first chapter of this book. >> until trump ends the early transition of america from the greatest nation in history into some pathetic third rater also-ran, multicultural mess, until bleeding has stopped, there is nothing trump can do that won't be forgiven. except change his immigration policies. at least one person found the timing of your book release so funny. i've watched this 20 times. you have to watch with it me
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now. >> who knew that it would be donald trump to convert the gop base to supporting amnesty on the same week ann coulter's book -- >> he either feels sorry for you or he's laughing at you. >> he was not the only one. and it reminds me, there is one lower form of humor than puns and that is taking someone else's joke and then immediately repeating it. the night before i had been on chris matthews' "hardball" and said this could be the shortest book tour ever. well, see, that's the same thing. everyone else. but i said it as a joke. >> so did rush just miss -- >> it is not just rush. it was everybody. who cares? i think trump did it to get me pu publicity for my book. i've done it before. i'm not a hillary cultist or a
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ted cruz cultist. i can still give helpful suggestions which is what i did on the hannity interview. simultaneously, he was getting magnificent speeches all last week in tampa and fredericksburg. no change in position. and i had not seen, they just handed me what he had said about this softening. and on closer examination, he was appearing with the mothers of children who had been murdered by illegals. that never would have happened with another presidential candidate. >> the two fox town halls. there were two last week. one of them -- >> right, right. and it was shawn who was pressing and pressing and using the gang of legerdemain, paying back taxes and they're so law-abiding. he was just repeating what sean was saying. >> so the deportation force and the 11 million people will go? >> we have one.
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it is called i.c.e. i think he will enforce the laws as em1 million times. you trust trump's original -- >> the rhetoric could be softened. he started at 11. you can present it in a way that won't frighten people, i suppose. it doesn't frighten me. but you've seen a lot of that going on since the convention. i happen to like his free form jazz style speeches. where he tells jokes and calls out people and calls his opponents funny names. i think they're funny. but i understand that he needs to be more presidential now he is and being more presidential. the speeches he's giving, and you should show those more. the media is hiding them. they're excellent speeches. >> there are definitely more. >> you think they should be deported, right? >> i don't think we should be giving them amnesty.
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>> so they should be deported or not? >> someone, trump has never said that week one we're going to have 40 million gone. >> i'm asking for you. >> of course. >> you think they should be deported, right? basically, yeah. >> if trump ends up in some other place, a pathway to citizenship or something else. >> would be contrary to his whole plan, yes. >> you would be done with him, right in. >> no. he would still be better than any others but i wouldn't vote enthusiastically and i doubt he would win. it is more with him winning the election. saying you won't do what you've been promising to do for a year. it is one thing on soften the rhetoric. that's fine. but look, his entire platform as i point out in the book has been put america's interests first. tread, immigration, foreign wars. putting americans first. >> you don't think there's any security interest for the u.s. in taking these people out of shadows and not granting them citizenship? you couldn't live with any legal
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status. >> it's not that i can't live with it. i don't think it is good for americans. >> to bring them out of the shadows. >> i think there are more transgenders than americans worried about those who broke in illegally, are taking jobs illegally. how quickly it moves doesn't really matter. of course, get rid of the first ones first. every illegal alien and this i describe in the book. the most law abiding illegal alien with one child in school costs americans more than $12,000 a year to he had xat child. that's assuming, not even accounting for the astro no, ma'amally expensive. english as a second classes, free school lunches, the merge rooms, the cars. this is all to get cheap labor for people who live in this neighborhood, by the way. the illegal aliens don't live in this neighborhood. they come in to do the maid work and the nanny work and then they go fill up other people's schools and suddenly there's no
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money for the christmas passage end because we're spending so much money. we are a generous people i never thought i. krerks or the deportation force would act in an angry or aggressive way. we're kind people. there may be some illegals. why do we always, why does the discussion have to start with the hard case? we have not been enforcing laws on the books for 30, 40 years now. why do you start with the wild outlier case and rearaining the whole solar system to deal with that one, the one illegal -- let's get rid of the 40 million first. >> just on the basis, there was a big thing last week that said, 2,000 people they asked. a fairly big poll. 76% said they think undocumented immigrants work as hard. 71%. they fill most of the jobs u.s. citizens don't want. only 61% are against border wall. why is that it you are in favor
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of so many proposals in your book that in a general view of immigration, that is so far outside the american main stream? >> well, i don't think it is. about how deseptember dwrif immigration polls always are. and that one there without hearing any more about the question. to ask about the illegal immigrants themselves. americans are compassionate and kind people. and to be talking about it as if it is the americans themselves. should we enforce laws on the books or should they be able to bring this cheap nannies and gardeners? should we have more or less immigration? because that's overwhelmingly on my side. so these are utterly deceptive polls whenever they ask about the path to legalization, they're always loaded up with the kind of thing that hannity was pushing trump to say last week about paying back taxes. they're not law-abiding.
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back taxes means we the tax payer pay each illegal alien about 30,000 in earned income tax credit refund. no illegal alien is enough money the pay any tafls. so they're lying questions and polls whenever a poll was asked simply ask honestly, do you want more or less immigration? >> if donald trump loses -- that's in my book. the poll actually shows that. >> if donald trump loses, whose fault will it be? >> i don't think he is going to lose. >> do you think all the poll are so flawed? >> i wouldn't discount the polls but i think they'll change. i think it is more likely than not that he'll win. there is the possibility that he will lose. >> even some of his advisers think that it is getting harder -- >> thank god he doesn't listen to his advisers. general advisers do not come off very well in this book. trump has more votes than any
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other republican in primary history because he didn't have the washington consultants, the pollsters, the think tanks with all their idiotic the points. >> if he loses, whose fault will it be? >> i don't know. that's a lot of, i'm piling on we don't know what will happen, a lot of hypotheticals. i can phrase it slightly differently which is what you may be asking about. i don't know what washington insiders think they're getting out of their never trump crew. they're destroying republican party one way or another. if he loses, i don't think do i or anything do you will make a difference. because the country is over. >> i have to ask you this question. there are so many things we've spent a lot of time on this. i brought tons of issues. >> like my quote of you. >> but i would rather quote your writing here about serge koval he isky. people asked about what most
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troubles, his mockery was the top of the poll. it is true that trump was not mimicking him. he doesn't jerg his arms. he sits calmly but his hands were curved in. he is doing a standard retard. are you suggesting that he was impersonating what you regard as a standard disabled person? if so, is that okay? why this language? >> there is a famous line from what is it? tropic thunder. a whole little speech what's his name? on robert downey jr. on advising one of the actors. you don't want to do full retard. okay. you don't like the word. oh, well. the point remains -- >> to be clear, i'm not sure it is me who doesn't like the word. it is the vast swath of americans who doesn't like it. >> i was called a lot of words
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this weekend and i didn't mind. so i think we need develop a little thicker skin. but the point is, and i'm glad you got back to this. something i didn't know when i wrote the book and i am writing about it in tonight's column. it is a despicable deliberate that the media has told about donald trump mocking a disaged person. he did not do that. the proof positive of this is that in the exact same speech, did he the exact same imitation of a general. and the media knew that. and they will not show us that clip. he has done the exact same imitation of ted cruz. this is how he dud cause the flustered cowardly person or frightened person. when someone posted those videos on the "washington post" website in a perfectly respectful comment, the "washington post" instantly took it down. they don't want people to see, maybe trump isn't a good sketch actor but he was not mocking a disabled man. that was a media lie. >> instead, he was mocking a
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standard retard. >> that's an acting, a famous acting, representeding to be a retard. you may not like my words. that's not the words trump used. he was flailing his arm. he did it for a general. the general is not disabled. ted cruz is not disabled. that's a media high whether you like my words or not. i don't like and that is a med high. >> for the record, i don't mike word. >> ann coulter. always brave, never flustered. her book is called "in trump we trust." we'll talk about politics. you can listen to us on the radio at bloomberg 91.1 fm.
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can help you every step of the way so you can focus on what you do. we'll handle the legal stuff that comes up along the way. legalzoom. legal help is here. joining me, he has a book out called democracy in black. how race still enslaves the american soul. thank you for coming back on the show. bigotry. a big topic in the campaign. donald trump calls hillary clinton a bigot. hillary clinton calls donald trump a bigot. you say that's only an issue that interests white people. >> yeah. it is kind of indicative of the very ways african-americans are getting court. it is actually consistent with how we are often treated in
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these election cycles. that is chess pawns to be moved about and not as thinking rational political actors. so to call hillary clinton a bigot is in some ways to say i am not a bigot. for hillary clinton to say, let's look at what emis really, has little to do with, well, what about the housing crisis and what happened in the african-american communities? what about double digit unemployment? public education? what about employment, jobs? what about the colonel state of black communities and how are your policies going to respond? in some ways, it is typical american racial theater. and it has little to do with black people. it has an effect on black people. >> what do you attribute that -- why is that where we are? it sounds like that's your assessment of it. i think these issues are more fraught ask more complicated to discuss now than at any other point in my professional life.
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what do you attribute that to? >> it has something 22nd the vitriol unleashed by barack obama. i talk about something called the value gap. we talk about the achievement gap and the wealth gap. even the empathy gap. underneath it is the value gap. that white people matter more than others. when we tell the history of the country. >> nobody raises their kids to think that. >> no. it is not about an explicit belief. it is about, based in the oxygen. i always tell story about, all you have to do. you learn race. you learn the value gap by moving about in space. just driving in certain communities and driving out of those communities. we learn how certain folks are valued and not valued. going on school, going on work. all of this is circulating. even when we thought we turned a quoern the election of the first african-american president. what did we see in response? we saw the vitriol of the tea
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party. we saw the wholesale attack of people of color. so it is a reassertion. >> we have seen the last couple weeks of donald trump doing this ostentatious outreach to african-americans, although he hasn't really spoken this front of african-american audiences. there is an argument that hillary clinton and the democrat party take the party for granted. is there something to the argument? >> absolutely. absolutely. in political science, my colleague talks about african-american motors as a captured electorate. the only thing they have to do is deliver them every two and four years with no promise of delivering on policy. and fumbles have to take a certain percentage to jeopardize the democrats' chance but they aren't really concerned about the issues facing communities. what you have, it has a distorted relationship to the
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democratic process. this like cattle chewing cud. trump is the wrong messenger. i can't even take him seriously. look at what's happening in north carolina. so republicans are going to say give as you chance. give you a chance about cutting capital gains? about cutting estate taxes? a chance of what? purging voting rolls is this. >> how about paul ryan on poverty. is there any republican doing any policy -- any republican? >> that doesn't feel -- >> any issue. not just the conversation of raceful are there issues around which you can see being open -- do you have bank robberi you have problems with hillary clinton, right? >> i have big problems with hillary clinton. how can i take paul ryan seriously, right? when he talks about poverty, he talks about race.
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he backs up, he backtracks on the comments he made earlier with regard to the culture of poverty. then when they say trump is a racist. he doesn't condemn it. so it is okay to have a racist as your nominee but you'll be sincere in talking about these issues? it is just a contradiction. >> you've gotten a lot of grief on this. we ran over on that last block. >> that's a shame. >> i have to ask you. you said that donald trump is more dangerous than the ku klux klan yet you won't vote for hillary clinton. how do you reckon spil in your mind? >> i don't want to vote from a position of fearful i want to vote from a position of power. to my mind, he live in a relatively blue state. i can actually vote my conscience. if you live in a battle ground state it makes sense to vote for hillary clinton. with you hillary clinton's politics are not high politics. as she is courting republicans,
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she is taking progressives for granted. we don't need to let our fear of donald trump keep us from vetting the policies of hillary clinton. >> thank you for coming. we'll have you back more time soon. coming up, donald trump's secret teleprompter after this. it's less useful like a hat for your cat surface has touch and a beautiful screen you can see things like they've never been seen this mac doesn't quite compare it's slower, heavy, and a bit square fold it in half, hello when you start lighter than air, you can doodle a heart yes it's plain to see the surface pro 4 is made for me get between you and life's dobeautiful moments.llergens flonase gives you more complete allergy relief. most allergy pills only control one inflammatory substance. flonase controls 6. and six is greater than one. flonase changes everything. ♪
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everyone is quick to point out that donald trump doesn't use a teleprompter. he adlibs. that's what makes him a different kind of candidate. what if donald trump all this time has been using a teleprompter. a secret teleprompt per only he can see? our crack team of researchers investigated. >> so i said, the founder of isis. obviously you're being sarcastic but not that sarcastic to be honest with you. i love you very much.
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so huma is married to anthony weiner who is a perv. you know what that is, right? look at my african-american over here. here's another one. go home to mom. and your mother is voting for trump? she is voting for trump! oh, wow. paul o'neal of the yankees. hey, you come from ohio? >> i was only kidding. you can get baby out of here. >> i love you. i think it is a guy. i don't know. who the hell cares. oh, no, it's not. beautiful. i like that much better. the poor guy. i don't know what i said. i don't remember! he's going, i don't remember. maybe that's what i am. and i never expect to hear that from you again. she said, i never expect to hear that from you again. she said he's -- terrible.
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>> walk away from the election turn. allergies? stuffy nose? can't sleep? enough. take that. a breathe right nasal strip of cours imagine just put one on and pow! it instantly opens your nose up to 38% more than allergy medicine alone. so you can breathe, and sleep. better than a catnap. shut your mouth and say goodnight, mouthbreathers. breathe right. hillary clinton: i'm hillary clinton and i approve this message. vo: in times of crisis america depends on steady leadership. donald trump: "knock the crap out of them, would you? seriously..."vo: clear thinking... donald trump: "i know more about isis than the generals do, believe me." vo: and calm judgment. donald trump: "and you can tell them to
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go fu_k themselves." vo: because all it takes is one wrong move. donald trump audio only: "i would bomb the sh_t out of them." vo: just one. they automatically shrinkn itemthe pricesjet carts, of millions of other products. very impressive. whew... it's got a little kick to it. at jet.com, we're always looking for money saving innovations. if you have moderate to severe plaque psoriasis, isn't it time to let the real you shine through? introducing otezla (apremilast). otezla is not an injection or a cream. it's a pill that treats plaque psoriasis differently. with otezla, 75% clearer skin is achievable after just 4 months, with reduced redness, thickness, and scaliness of plaques. and the otezla prescribing information don't take otezlant for if you are allergicitoring. to any of its ingredients.
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go to politics.com right now for the details on trump's trip to mexico. nicole will be here tomorrow. i may not be. >> oh, no! is it something i said? >> we'll be together. don't worry. virtually. until tomorrow. "hardball" with chris matthews is next. trump's big game in mexico. let's play "hardball." good evening i'm in for chris matthews. we are waiting for trump's big immigration speech said to come later tonight from air air. there are lots of unanswered questions about where exactly trump stands

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