The Five : FOXNEWSW : October 7, 2024 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT : Free Borrow & Streaming : Internet Archive (2024)

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you taking out any iranian nuclear positions, some extended don't touch oil positions, because oil prices will go up everywhere. they are trying to narrow, what you can do, what you think of it? >> i cannot go into specifics about the targets, but we will retaliate, it will be painful. when you speak about the nuclear capability is, let me ask you that, until when should we wait? until they are capable of putting in a ballistic missile? or launching it into israel or europe or the u.s.? show up should be what can we do together from keeping them from the capability is. >> neil: good seeing you, sorry about the circumstances. we will continue on that next time. "the five" now. >> jesse: hello i am jesse watters along with

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judge jeanine pirro, harold ford jr., dana perino and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five." ♪ ♪ somebody is panicking after treating the press like they have cooties and democrats privately freaking out about a lack of visibility, kamala harris is flooding the zone this week with a blitz of back-to-back media interviews. but it is a who's who of friendly's. she will be chatting it up with the ladies on "the view" getting friendly with shock jock howard stern and late nights ultimate liberal kiss up stephen colbert. harris getting herself ready for all of these hard-hitting sit downs by appearing on something called the call her daddy podcast, watch. >> i'm curious, like you don't do too many long form inte interviews, what made you want to do call her daddy today? >> i think that you and your listeners have really got this

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thing rights, which is one of the best ways to communicate with people is to be real. this is a moment in the country and in life where people really want to know that they are seen and heard and that they are part of a community, that they are not out there alone and so i'm really glad to be with you. >> jesse: encouraging kamala to do an interview with a host who may be isn't wearing a sweatshirt. >> they have to do more serious interviews from the business world, they don't think she is serious. they don't think she is a heavy weight and a lot of this is gendered, but she needs to be more specific about our economic plans. >> jesse: give credit where credit is due, tim walz going on ""fox news sunday"" and shannon bream drilling the knucklehead on all of those times that he repeatedly misspoke. >> a lot of people would say they could not get away with saying i am passionate, i'm a knucklehead, what you say to the american people who think i don't know that i can trust this

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guy with all of those modifications to be the potential commander in chief of this country? >> i think they heard me and they heard me speaking passionately about gun violence and misspeaking. i have to be honest with you, shannon. i don't think people care about whether i use iui or ivf, i speak passionately. >> jesse: judge jeanine, what does it say about the kamala harris strategy that they have changed it 180 degrees four weeks before the election? >> what is interesting as we just came off of one hurricane and there is another category five that is scheduled to hit tampa and florida and instead of taking the opportunity to prove to the american people that she is interested in the, she is now twisting it to i think i will do a little humor with howard stern and see stephen colbert and i will go on "the view" none of it make sense, she is risk-averse to the media and it is an

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immediate blitz, they call it a media blitz, she still avoids most of the media as mitchell said. and instead of taking the opportunity to say america, i hear you, you're worried about the money and i will get out there make sure you get that money, but i think that if she needs to be transactional, she needs to get something out of it, be transactional, think about it this way, if you take care of the american people, maybe they will vote for you. but i had not heard that quote before, when she was on that podcast she said one of the best ways to communicate with people is to be real. so then why did she pick tim walz? because we really don't even know who the real tim walz is. he has lied so much and it's not just about the rank in the war and the weapons of war and big on the tarmac and it's the dwi and the dui that someone was chasing him and all of that other nonsense and then of course the ivf. any lied when he said that trump

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is against it. he said he would give it to americans who need it. but his rationalizing is on passionate, forgive me. i'm a knucklehead, forgive me. that's not an excuse and it's not an answer. and finally, if he thinks he is getting sympathy or social status or he is preserving his false sense of who he is, the question then american people are asking right now is who is the real tim walz? which one is coming to the white house? and when you draw on your real life experience, tim walz, which side will you draw it from? the real side or the lying side? >> jesse: why is she changing her strategy, harold ford jr.? she had a strategy locked in and was going to rise above and now she is just going into all of these venues, soft venues, why do you think she changed. >> harold: i hope you had a good weekend, i did, to everyone, i know we are talking about in the third block and i am sending all of my prayers to all my friends as i know this is

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a tough time too, this issue, i think we have been urging her to take a long form interview to the press conference, i want more debates and i think everyone around the table might have at some point, and she has decided to do that. what i think she has unveiled and how she is doing this is that she has a different way of closing them president trump is going to close. i wish that both would do another debate. i wish vice president harris would not only said it was 60 minutes, but i wish she would sit with more and take some of the questions even tougher questions and she faced at some of the setting she has been in. but she is doing this and she is basically making it clear that she does not believe in undecided voters really care. i happen to think she is wrong and i think that president trump -- he believes his closing strategy as i am going to excite and energize those who are going to vote for me and we are going to outnumber those that vote for her. and i am old-fashioned.

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i wish they would stand side-by-side and get answers to some of the tough questions. i'm pleased she has made a little bit of a change in the strategy. i've not seen the "60 minutes" interview. i'm looking forward to seeing that. i wish both had done then and sat down. maybe i'm longing for days that are no longer going to be in politics. as i have said before, i hope this tradition of not doing debates is something that comes to an end after this election. >> jesse: don't you usually do the soft interviews balanced off with hard interviews to get to know the candidate in a different way? not the only way? >> dana: yes, i am having a hard time differentiating her understanding convention kamala and conventional kamala. she had this amazing convention, everyone was for her, they were all excited. the democrats are all in. she has all the celebrities, all of the support. she has the obamas there and everyone is excited and then she

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went away for four days and we did not see her and ever since and it's been like why did you sit on that inspiration a moment and just let it fizzle? so now pretty much people make fun of it saying, any question they get, first of all i was raised in a middle-class family. i don't think that more laughter is what is needed right now. if you are a woman running, you have to punch above your wait. and this is not punching above your wait. this is going to places where you think you are going to be safe. now i can imagine on november 6th saying either that was a brilliant strategy in retrospect or that's the reason that she lost. i'm not exactly sure how it's going to turn out. i remember when obama did "between toothed ferns" and it was a new show when we were like why is he doing that? there is a part that i thought what do they know that we don't? is it going to work? i'm one thing about the andrea mitchell point, you have to

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punch above your weight, that's just the other way of saying it. she was trying to be nice, it's because of gender, but it's because people don't take you seriously. in one of the "60 minutes" clips, bill whitaker is questioning her on how she was going to get her spending. and he is cuts her off and says, how are you going to pay for it? and goes back around, pay your fair share. and he says we are dealing with the real world. i'm looking forward, because i think that he pressed her a little bit and it was not maybe the softest interview and she knew that it was not going to be. but there's convention kamala and conventional kamala and i don't know if that's good enough to win. >> jesse: let's go to conventional greg gutfeld. >> greg: while she was doing call your daddy, her husband was doing call your nanny. they did not report that. it's not so much a strategy as a feels like a commiseration, getting together with the girls after a bad breakup, that's called her daddy.

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cold beer, stern, both have castrated themselves the wok wokeism. everyone is passing her around because they don't know what to do. and it's like the people in charge of the building they have left for the month. it's like they are asking neighbors to water the plants and she gives the plant. they don't know what to do with it. it's not working out. she can't read a prompter or think for herself. she's not bad, she is pathetic. and when you look at men in what manner of thinking and i think even young people who are voting for trump, the mistake they made was painting him as dangerous, because when your choice is pathetic, you know, we are going to go a dangerous every time. would you rather be the 1976 oakland raiders, harold, or the 1976 tampa bay buccaneers. i will be the raiders, the pirate ship. as you know i do a lot of interviews with young women in my podcasts, gut wraps with

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teens. they love backing trump, because it irks the man. in these days what is the man? it is the skittish panicky week kamala supporters. the colberts that are relegated to the front lawn, shaking their rakes at those rebellious kids come you want to piss off your ponytail kamala pin wearing teacher, that's where the energy is coming from, because what you are getting come you feel like you're getting something from the machine. nobody likes the machine, jesse. >> jesse: and women like the bad boy. >> greg: that's true, that's how i got where i was, jesse. >> judge jeanine: elon musk, as the president makes his triumphant return to butler. ♪ ♪

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♪ ♪ >> dana: donald trump making his triumphant return to butler, pennsylvania, where just 12 weeks ago a wood-bss and grazed his ear and nearly ended his life. a cheer on the president and remembering the seat in honor of the fire went mad firefighter who was shot and killed during the attempted assassination. kicking off the rally right where he left off pointing to the immigration chart that saved his life. >> we left pennsylvania and as i

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was saying, oh, i love that. i love that chart, a cold-blooded assassin aim to silence me and silenced the greatest movement, maga and the history of our country. he did not stop our movement. he did not break out our spirit. he did not shake our unyielding resolve to save america. i will never quit, i will never bend or break or yield not even in the face of death itself. >> dana: and bringing along a very special guest, elon musk taking a plea to get out there and vote. >> i am not just maga, i am dark maga. it's no ordinary election, the other side wants to take away your freedom of speech. you must have free speech in order to have democracy. that's why it is the first amendment. get everyone you know and everyone you don't know, drag

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them to register to vote. >> dana: the line "as i was saying" is imagery and storytelling and forwards that it's brilliant from a campaign standpoint. >> greg: it was a perfect opening. i disagree on that guy being a cold-blooded assassin, i believe in my head he was a brainwashed assassin curated by media generated hate, because while he is in butler, the media and the dems are portraying his supporters as violent extremists who will riot and if donald trump loses they will riot and if they win it will be worse. but then you go when you switch and see tens of thousands of people in a peaceful professional solemn event goes on without a hitch, it's just another contrast between what the media is telling you what you see to be true. this was a historic event and is a symbolic refusal to lay down

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in the face of fear and the idea that you should not go back there. and it's like the media is saying in general, you better not go back there. you better not reelect trump, because there will be hell to pay if donald trump wins there will be chaos and destruction and if that is true, it's going to come from them. they are portraying the selection like an extortion, trying to plant the seed that if you win there will be the return of blm, antifa, hamas protesters on top of that, a complete violent meltdown. but they disguise this as a response to you as if the population is worried about trump supporters. >> dana: jesse, no laura ingraham has an interview tonight, but as i recall you saw him like right after in pennsylvania and i know johnny was there, what did you pick up from that visit? >> jesse: he looked humbled and more devout than i had ever

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seen him. and so that clicked with me. johnny was there over the weekend and we will have that tonight, the story line of this election is trump surviving to pipe for you. whether it's the mug shots, the show trials, the character assassination are the real assassins, his reaction to these things that fighting instinct where you pick yourself off of the mat and you keep going forward has gained a level of respect for the america first movement to that was not possible before. and his return to butler is symbolic of how harris and biden have run the country. they failed to protect their opponent, the allies, the dollar and him coming back and surviving and fighting, hopefully foreshadows america coming back and continuing to fight. elon musk did not endorse

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officially donald trump until right after donald trump popped up and said fight, fight, fight. he tweeted it out and for a lot of other people at that moment when he stood up and said that it clicked for them too, because many americans ask the question, why are they trying to silence this man? his entire candidacy as an indictment upon the system. the system is corrupt, it's secretive, it's incompetent. it's authoritarian, and elon musk is a forward thinker. and he can see that this election is not just about donald trump. it's about the future of the country. can this country guaranteed free speech the right to bear arms, freedom of association, can guarantee our own sovereignty? and he's put a lot of reputation on the line, because he loses, kamala harris is going to come after him and come after him hard. for many reasons this is an important election and there is a lot at stake. >> dana: the crowd was massive and they would've climbed over

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broken glass to be there, does that give you a sense of how things might go on pennsylvania? >> judge jeanine: that's a great question i brought this statement down into four parts, a personal part that donald trump made it a point to bring corey comperatore back and the two other victims who were shot and he recognized the individuals. he stopped the speech at 6:11 which was the time he got shot and the bells tolled and then who comes out and sings of a maria, this audience was so mobilized. on their own, they started singing "god bless america." i had chills and was in tears just watching the patriotism and how strong it was and how i was able to say thank god not everyone has gone and then of course it was the psychological aspect, the bravery aspect where you had people who witnessed a shooting from the first to butler rally who came back, you had a

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president who was shot and came back. you had the family members who came back, look, people suffer from ptsd just seeing homicide and seeing someone shot. these people experienced it firsthand. they came back and then there is the political peace, pennsylvania is a toss-up state. every time it's one point, one point, one point. but for me the telling thing was that the democrats had 960,000 more registered voters in 2016 and pennsylvania. in 2020 it was down to 685. and in 2024 it's the democrats having an advantage, i really think that the way that it was orchestrated in the way that it happened that it was so -- just generic and just happened is going to make a big difference in the election. >> dana: harold, i will give you the final word. >> harold: it cannot be more pleas for the president that he d go out there and have the rally and some of the substance i did not like, but the image of

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what it meant was a powerful thing and every american should -- has to acknowledge the stretch that i agree with you was certainly inspiring. but at this point in the campaign 29 days out i don't care who was at the ticket on either side. you are looking at the data and looking at which voter you have to persuade to come to your site. as we get to the end of the race and i said in the first block i think that both of them have decided they will just try to appeal only to their base. in pennsylvania look at the two that are basically tied, john fetterman was on one of the shows earlier saying that this thing is super, super tight and will come down to the very end. i am advising either campaign and either candidate. the one thing i would tell him or her is what are you doing to try to win over the 30, 40, 50,000 voters in whatever state you might be in? i know we want to keep the base fired up and energized, but what do you want to do for that?

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talking about it the other night and not convinced that he was speaking to that group and perhaps he will get to speak to that group too. if i was blessed, blessed to ever run for office again and elon musk decides to support and speaks at my rally, one of the things i will ask him to say is will you lay out to give people something so they can be inspired by my economic agenda that i will be about growth and innovation? just say something. i thought they missed an opportunity to do a little bit of that. that's just me and as i've said many times before i'm old-fashioned about politics and i think that you have to do those things. i disagree with you in this regard. politicians, you say musicians coming out to endorse politics all the time and right away whoever wins gets right back together with them. elon musk is the most important innovator and technologist of our era, may be the last two, whoever is elected president has to work with him. i wish you a supporting my

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candidate, but if kamala harris is blessed when man, i hope she reaches out to them and does not punish him if anything else. >> dana: harold, diplomat. of course. and if you want to see more about president trump, laura ingraham has an exclusive interview that errors at 7:00 p.m. tonight. kamala harris refuses to say if she supports benjamin netanyahu one year after the horrific october 7th terror attacks. ♪ ♪ my dad believed in hard work, and the farm was the perfect place to learn grit, determination and problem solving. we're taking that passion and channeling it through our farm to home bedding bath, and apparel at red land cotton. we grow cotton in the rich red earth of north alabama. and we want our products to be made here in the usa, from the seed in the ground to the final stitch. go to red land cotton dot com and receive 20% off your order with code fox 20

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♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> harold: israel marking one year since the horrific and barbaric october 7th attacks. saw 12,000 -- 1200 innocent israeli slaughtered.

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early vice president harris marking the grim anniversary by planting a pomegranate tree at the residence. a fruit that symbolizes good wishes for the new year and judaism. vice president harris taking some criticism over what she said on "60 minutes" about prime minister benjamin netanyahu. listen to this. >> do we have real close ally in prime minister netanyahu? >> i think with all due respect the better question is do we have an important alliance between the american people and the israeli people. and the answer to that question is yes. >> harold: she decided to recast the question. might have just been best if she answer the question and then recast, what are your thoughts? >> greg: i don't care about that really, i would rather talk about what happened, what's going on today, you know, their protesters at wall street, columbia, 1,000 of them, anti-israeli protesters on the

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day, the year anniversary, did you think you would see that in america? protesting against the victims of the worst act of terror that we have seen with our own eyes. the evidence is there. you can look it up, women, ra raped, babies murdered in front of their parents, but people can get up out of bed, put on their clothes, go outside and mark that event by cheering for their killers. we used to always reflexively worry about is lummus phobia, now we just stand silently by while islamist terror is championed in our streets, what door have a hope and here? it's hard to look back on october 7, but you should. you should look at the photos with fresh eyes as it will ruin your day, but i did because i had to be reminded that i am not in the position to criticize what israel does. if it were me i would've blown the whole place up, which is why i am not in a position of leadership. if israel wants to eliminate all

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of hamas and hezbollah, you do it, you do it, israel, because no one can look at those photos of october 7th and then go out and march. so they are not. they are in the state of denial. and anybody who questions the support of israel and saying it's nuanced, remember that there are americans who also died on october 7th, there are ones that are still hostages they are and as long as that is the case, we are in. remember what we gave up for brittany griner? we traded an arms dealer for her and he has already back arms dealing, so we played a lot for that hostage. we should not treat any of the hostages any less because they aren't a wnba player. >> harold: what are your thoughts on the solemn day. >> dana: you mention she recast the question, but she could have done it in a different way too which would've been the correct thing to do you always as i learn you praise your allies in public and you criticize in private and she could've said i have had those

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conversations with the leader who is trying to do his best to protect his country and as the leader of this country i would do the same. and i would make sure that we were on offense against terrorism and you will not have to have a restless night if i am your commander in chief, because i will protect. there are lots of ways that she could have recasted and she decided not to. i wish we could understand as a country and i am thinking of those protesters too that what do they want to, which is victory look like to them? and to me victory is the goal to stamp out terrorism and then peace is possible after you achieve the victory. that's the other thing, but i also think that the way that 60 minutes asks the question they ask another one where he asks is benjamin netanyahu listening to you is a great question. because if they think that he has done all of these bad things that means that the joe biden and harris administration has been ineffective from the beginning. tom cotton tweeted last week

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that i served with kamala harris on the intelligence committee for four years and she was just as reckless and naive about national security and private as she has been as vice president. if you take that comment with what andrea mitchell was saying about the business community not taking her seriously, now you have the two main pillars, the economy and national security with people not taking you seriously, i would've answered it different. >> harold: judge, your thoughts? >> judge jeanine: there has been a 200% rise on anti-semitic hate over the past year. and on a solemn day like today i think we need to recognize that given that that is going on in the united states of america and given that they are stopping jewish students from going on campus and going to school on campus where their parents paid for their education, we have to recognize that this administration is not supporting jewish students and in america right now, because it is not just the question of the war, it's a quoted question of the political culture where the

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white house comes out and says you're not going to do this, you're not going to create this hatred towards in this country. but i think that i would've asked the following question if she refused to answer the question about whether or not to benjamin netanyahu was a close ally of the united states. i might've said to her, well, is there someone else in the middle east you consider an ally of the united states? who in the middle east is an ally? because and we all know this, elections have consequences. and the middle east was at peace after the abraham courts and ask yourself question, the abraham accords and you know this better than anyone here, harold. it was all about forming an alliance against iran in the abraham courts where the gulf states were going to do business with israel, who has changed in terms of leadership from when president trump was there and now where joe biden is they are? no one, all of the world leaders

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are the same other than joe biden and donald trump. donald trump had the middle east at peace, joe biden has them at war. you release the sanctions and you let them sell oil, you let the people who hate in america continue to do what they are doing and this is my message to benjamin netanyahu on a day like today. they said that he was unpopular. right now he is the most popular politician in recent history in israel. and the reason for that is because the israelis see him as a fighter. if the americans can't say he is a close ally given the fact that he is not just fighting for israel, he is fighting hezbollah and hamas for us, israel has to be allowed to win, they have every right to win, they should not be pulled back and told what is proportional. too much relies on this. >> harold: prime time, bring us home here. >> jesse: everyone makes such insightful statements, it's a great time to be here.

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we are looking for states woman ship and she can't deliver. you know when you see it, she does not have it. israel is a democracy. if they elect a far right leader or left leader, does not matter, they are going to be our ally. she does not understand the relationship that we have with the israeli people. we get all of our intelligence and the middle east from them and share the same goal. we don't want iran nuclear rise to. we definitely have a great trade relationship and we seldom tons of weapons. maybe not as great of a relationship as great britain or australia or japan, but they are right up there. all she has to say is what dana said. we have frank discussions, we do not agree on 100% everything, but we have their back and that's all israel wants to hear. she has managed to alienate and muslims. that's like how do you do that? >> harold: i don't tend to disagree with some of the things you said. but hillary clinton accused of pushing censorship.

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♪ ♪ >> greg: hillary clinton pushing big tech censorship as a solution for the kids depressed and addicted to social media. advocating more guardrails and regulations, check it out. speak of the platforms whether it is facebook or twitter x or instagram or tiktok or whatever they are, if they don't moderate and monitor the content, we lose total control and it's not just those social and psychological effects, it is real harm. it is child porn and threats of violence, things that are

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terribly dangerous. >> greg: thank you jabba the hutt, we will lose total control, who is "we" harold? >> harold: i find myself sometimes not in agreement with the secretary of state, but in this instance here i cut some slack come because i don't have the answer to it, but i think we can all agree that there's too much out there. i may be sensitive because i have a 10-year-old and a 9-year-old and my kids are not on these things yet, but we are trying our hardest to manage this. i don't know the answer to this. but i have to think that there is an answer out there. i don't believe that censorship is the answer, but if you give me the option and my 10-year-old daughter seeing something that those algorithms they designed that promote stuff for her that will challenge her self-esteem, i might be more on the side of censorship than not. i know that's not the answer, greg, but i understand the frustration and i hope that the

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great technologists of our era try to help us come up with an answer here or a solution to this problem. >> greg: jesse, i'm extremely worried that harold might've convinced me and that perhaps i had a misinterpretation of what hillary was talking about and maybe she was referring to dangers for children, plot try to pull me out of the spiral. >> jesse: i did not even listen to what he said. i'm just going to assume it's wrong. the aliens and sedition act passed many years ago made it a crime to publish anything full, scandalous, and malicious about the government. think about how crazy that was and that survive for many, many years and now we have always had a robust tradition in this country whether it was like pamphlets or newspapers or radio tv cables, social media now. you can pretty much say whatever you want about the government and that's what makes america

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america. you can't now censor free speech because you think that it's disinformation. everything they have said has been this information has been. this is like the last gasp of people clung to power for too long and they realized their stranglehold is over. remember what happened in the late '90s was the rise of fox news. that was the rise of talk radio, and what was everybody talking about back then? bill clinton and monica. it all goes back to that. she has never gotten over it. >> greg: interesting, issue using the concern for children as a trojan horse to censor basically the people she doesn't like? which are the people that are republicans or not? >> judge jeanine: i will answer the question that my friend harold did in it. we as the democrat party. she's talking about total control and if you don't know that from the 2020 election, then you really weren't listening. but let's talk about section 2:30, the communications decency act, it's whether we as americans want to make the

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social media platforms require them to act as a publisher, which means that they are responsible for things that are reliable or defamatory. now as a prosecutor, i used to prosecute places of child pornography online. the communications decency act came into effect when people were saying, how do you know that child engaged in a act where it looks like a 7-year-old is really a child with a name as opposed to a virtual kind of picture of a child. so there are many different aspects of the communications decency act. some applies to the person who was actually has the platform and the other is the user. as a user i can prosecute you any day of the weekend sue you for it civilly and criminally. she wants more than that. she wants to be able to shut down the platform and be able to control if not shut down control what they post, and we

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experienced it. there is no filter, no algorithms and what she wants to do is create them. >> greg: dana, and she using them children as a trojan horse? >> dana: i think that the dnc should get together and have a vote for a moratorium on any hillary clinton books released a month before the election, this happens every single time. then she gets out there and she says things that are not road tested like the deplorables line. she had run that by somebody i imagine chelsea would've said, mom, i don't think that's a good one they will use that against you. she said lose total control, someone could've said actually people in the middle or thinking that free speech is a huge election issue and how do we get there? because inflation at the border in the national security preventing in the middle east is how we got to its meaning a free-speech election issue. >> greg: she creates the disconnection, interesting fact, thank you, greg.

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- [narrator] life with ear ringing sounded like a constant train awhistle i couldn't escape.e. then i started taking lipo flavonoid. with 60 years of clinical experience, it's the number one doctor recommended brand for ear ringing. and now i'm finally free. take back control with lipo flavonoid. ♪ ♪

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>> judge jeanine: welcome back, this box office bomb is not a joke. "joker 2" flopping after only making $40 million it's opening weekend. the first movie made $1 billion. so what went wrong? many fans calling it boring, and saying they hated that it was a musical. now you know, greg, do you like to dance at musicals when you go to the movie theater? >> greg: sometimes. that's a very personal question, judge. this movie is for you, judge. it's a courtroom musical. you love musicals, you love courtrooms. he put them together, you've got this. everybody hates something, that makes me think i want to see it. because sometimes it's like it just takes a while for somebody to get use to it. a lot of people, i don't know if you know this, hated me. they did not like "redeye" what is he doing at 5:00 p.m.? but i grew on them like a diseased fungus.

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>> judge jeanine: all right, day now. >> dana: i did not know that the movie was coming out. i remember there was a movie that they came to when they did not realize it was musical and it was mayhem and everybody hated it. but i think i might go. i'll wait for the palatine bike ride. >> jesse: greg said something so deep. when every one hates something that makes me want to see it more. that explains his taste in mu music. >> greg: may be. >> harold: i'm with greg on this. i'm going to see the movie. i love joaquin phoenix. i can't wait to see it. >> judge jeanine: . >> judge jeanine: rotten tomatoes gave it a 33. >> harold: they did not like "beverly hills cop 4" either. and i liked it.ght, >> judge jeanine: all right, "one more thing" "one more thing" is next. ♪ ♪ whatever you do, do it for less at harbor freight. save even more at our parking lot sale this weekend. (♪)

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♪ >> jesse: time now for "one more thing." you have to watch "the five" tomorrow. it's going to be, there it is, melania will be on former first

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lady, everybody knows what the deal is. watch tomorrow. tonight, "jesse watters primetime," eric trump at 8:00. and then we'll just have barron on probably. [laughter] who else from the family wants to come on? >> greg: i would take barron in a second. >> jesse: i know you would. you sicko. >> greg: oh, what a show. michael loftus. kevin mccarthy. kat timpf, tyrus tonight at 10:00 p.m. screw football. it's for losers. hey, let's do this. in your face, harold. [laughter] i'm just going to before we run, this i'm going to tell you exactly what this woman says. oh my god, harold, harold, wait, harry, okay. proceed. what? >> oh my god, harold. you have to wait, harry. okay. proceed. [laughter]

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>> greg: that moment of harold took place in bridgeton, new jersey. and we got a contact called to get a comment from the horse and all he said was in your face, harold. in your face. >> so anybody know pigmy hippopotamus called my dang? kennedy knows about the hippopotamus. and she was in a costume contest this weekend halloween. she got robert. she was the only one who dressed up. i want to give her a shout-out. took her french bulldog and turned him into mudang. >> jesse: i thought she actually got robbed. >> dana: perino on politics. if you care about the senate races pay attention to this podcast. >> harold: new yorkers got together as massive pot luck with tables stretch out 21st street between 9th and 10th do this across the brooklyn bridge to celebrate the 250th anniversary of the country. d bless them. >> jesse: that's it for us. thank you. >> bret: good evening, welcome to washington. i'm bret

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Dana Perino, Greg Gutfeld, Jesse Watters, Jeanine Pirro and a rotating host discuss and debate hot issues across the spectrum, from politics to pop culture; the hosts also conclude each show with the "One More Thing" segment.

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