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tv   Hannity  FOX News  October 1, 2014 7:00pm-8:01pm PDT

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i get asked about you all the time. she's still alive. she's doing great and still giving everybody guf. happy birthday. tune in tomorrow night. this is "the kelly file." i'm megyn kelly. welcome to "hannity." this is a fox news alert. secret service director julia pierson has resigned in the wake of security lapses at the white house. fox's own ed henry is standing by in the briefing room with the very latest tonight. ed. >> reporter: sean, a really dramatic turn of events because as of this morning josh earnest, the press secretary, was doing various television interviews saying the president still had full confidence in julia pierson. what changed in those few hour sns a number of things. one, white house officials say they only learned late yesterday about this second breach in recent days. but this elevator incident where a security guard with a gun who had a criminal record got very close to the president. and it turned out julia pierson while briefing the president
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recently about the fence jumping incident that really started all this did not disclose what had happened in atlanta. that was a problem. but i've pressed josh earnest on why it took a resignation from the director. why didn't the white house push to get her out if they were so troubled by this? listen. why didn't senior people here at the white house including the president determine on their own? why were you waiting for her to give a resignation? isn't a person with a criminal record and a gun getting inches away from the president enough to say somebody needs to be fired here? >> well, ed, i can tell you that that incident that you're referring to is something that the white house was made aware of only yesterday, less than 24 hours ago. that occurred just minutes before that report was published for the public to review. >> but also changed today was growing pressure from the president fellow democrats, not republicans. elijah cummings, the top democrat on that panel that's investigating the security breaches saying they had lost confidence in julia pierson.
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joe clancy, the former special agent in charge who had been very close to the president, has his respect, a lot of respect of secret service agents around here trying to restore morale to an agency very much under fire right now. but it should be noted that joe clancy was the special agent in charge around the president back in 2009 when another breach happened, the salahis and party state crashers. now it's up to joe clancy in the short-term to try to stop the bleeding at least. and they're also announcing an independent panel to investigate what's gone wrong but also how to fix all this, sean. >> let me ask you this because we have the fence jumping incident, the cdc incident which you refer to where a guy got on the elevator and had a gun with him. and then of course the shooting incident in 2011. a lot of agents now are beginning to speak out. they told "the washington post" several weeks ago that pierson was considered a weak candidate among rank and file because she had relatively little
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supervising experience. >> it was a surprise when she was picked. that's why maybe why the white house was digging in for a couple of days and why i noted at the top that josh earnest as of this morning saying she still had the president's full confidence. not just republicans but democrats were saying her testimony on the hill was a disaster. was the president dug in because this was his pick? someone who didn't have a lot of experience in terms of she had experience at the agency but not in a management role like this. that's why they're going to have to look. and it seems likely they're going to get somebody from the outside to try to shake this up. you mentioned "the washington post," they've been breaking a series of stories about this. i've talked to insiders at the secret service who say they think there's a whole lot more coming. that this is just the tip of the iceberg. >> now we have governor perry, david limbbaugh and juan williams. the cdc confirmed the first case of ebola diagnosed right here in the united states. federal health officials are now tracking anyone who had close contact with this patient
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remains in isolation in a dallas hospital. fox's own john roberts he's standing by at the cdc. he's in atlanta tonight with the very latest. john. >> sean, the more we hear about this case the more troubling information comes to light. reports out of monrovia, liberia say thomas eric duncan actually helped move an ebola patient who died just hours later. and then four days after that he flew on an airplane here to the united states. when he got here and became ill last thursday night, he went to the hospital and despite the fact he told the triage nurse he had just come from liberia, he was discharged from the hospital. apparently that message never got passed. hospital official dr. mark lester tells us what happened. >> regretfully that information was not fully communicated throughout the whole team. and as a result the full import of that information wasn't factored in to the clinical decision making. >> reporter: after he was sent home duncan who was getting progressively more sick was in close contact with many family
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members including five children who went to four dallas schools earlier this week. governor rick perry tried to allay parents fears saying they were asymptomatic. united airlines confirmed duncan flew to the united states on two of its flights, one from brussels to dulles and one from dulles to dallas. >> john, thank you. we'll have more on ebola coming up later when we're joined by texas governor rick perry. first, we turn our attention to the brutal oklahoma beheading. the suspect, alton nolen is now being held without bond in the county jail after pleading not guilty today to charges of first-degree murder during a video arraignment. when the judge told nolen the court would appoint him an attorney, he requested a muslim to represent him. also the department of justice is now involved in the investigation. they're treetding this beheading as a "crime to see if there's a terrorist connection." really? an allout firestorm underway in
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d.c. after the president threw the intelligence community under the bus. both intel officials and lawmakers are fighting back and defending the work that's being done and the advice the president received about the terror network. the director of national intelligence james clapper issued this memo to his staff saying he was proud of the work done to monitor isis. in addition, south carolina senator lindsey graham sent a letter to the president requesting the declassification of his daily briefs which contain warnings about isis for more than a year. and just yesterday our very own ed henry asked josh earnest exactly that. watch this. >> in the interest of public disclosure, is the white house considering, would you consider, declassifying -- the president can declassify some information from there now that he's said we have underestimated all this, why not share with the public what you did know a year ago? >> well, i don't think -- it certainly wouldn't be my decision and not one i would render from here about whether or not to declassify elements of
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one of the most closely held intelligence documents in the u.s. government. i don't think that will result in the declassifying of, again, what i would describe as probably the most closely held intelligence document in the u.s. government. >> the question remains what exactly tid the president know about isis? when did he know it? joining me now he raised that question on his nationally syndicated radio talk show, mark levine. what did they know specifically? when did they know it? we want those briefings, right? >> yeah, sean. and have you noticed nothing really works under this president? from the secret service to immigration to the economy. gee, i wonder why that is. could it be because he's a radical liberal? i don't know. all that said, sean, the fact of the matter is the president's briefing book i a contain an enormous amount of information going way back about the islamos and the spread of terrorism in the middle east and what's going on today. he doesn't read his briefing books. he doesn't attend his briefings.
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and i say enough is enough. and i'm going to tell you why. he's the commander in chief. this is his major responsibility to protect us and to ensure our security. there are thousands of men and women who went to iraq, who fought, who died, who did not come back. many did come back with terrific -- horrific casualties. and we owe it to them as a people to get to the bottom of this. it is my contention that the president of the united states right now is in a full-blown cover-up. that's why he went to his favorite "60 minutes" correspondent steve crop. that's why he blamed his intelligent agencies for this. this has nothing to do with the intelligence agencies. it has to do with the intelligence between his ears. and the fact of the matter is he's not paying attention to his job. he's not attentive to what a president's supposed to be attentive to because he's so busy revolutionizing our economy and our government and transforming it. he's not doing his job. >> but he spent more time playing golf, mark. now, this is very interesting. look, you worked in government,
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you worked in the reagan administration, you were ed nees's chief of staff. you know how government works. the intelligence community is now fighting back. that tells me they're fed up. and now all these reports have come out that the president was warned in granular detail about everything involving isis and warned specifically about the consequences of pulling out of iraq too early. what at this point can we possibly do even if you get the information showing he knew? >> i tell you exactly what we can do. it is time, once and for all, to find a leader in the united states congress who will stand up. it's not going to be boehner because he won't stand up. but somebody has to stand up, call for a commission, find out -- get fot bottom of this while he's still president. not 30 years from now when everybody's looking back and wringing their hands. i want to know, did the president of the united states know about the creation, the development of isis and this caliphate? i believe he knew about it for years. i believe he knew about it when he was running for office.
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he concealed it from the american people. we have all kinds of information to indicate this. i want to know if the president of the united states is ignoring 60% of his intelligence briefings if he's refusing to read his intelligence briefings. >> we know the answer to that. >> yeah. >> we know the answer to that. that's the point. he's not reading it. >> but we want to hold them -- it's time to hold him to account. these things show up in newspapers. people issue this stuff. couple of congressmen bark and that's the end of it and we go on to the next crisis. the country's falling apart. it's unraveling. everything you look at is a mess. it's time to pin him down on something. and this is life and death. this is war and peace. and by the way, while we're at it, congress declares war. will john boehner and mitch mcconnell draw up a declaration of war? or are we going to continue to allow this president to conduct himself -- and let me be very clear and i don't mean to be provocative about this, he is
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now fighting a political war. these pinpricks are not stopping isis. isis is about to conquer baghdad. it's on the move on the turkish border. it's more powerful this month than it was last month despite our bombing raids. obama has the military on a short leash. now, let's let them off the leash. let's declare war. and let's defeat them. this is world war 3 and we need world war ii tactics. >> he's never going to do that, in my opinion. i agree with you. i think this is a show war leading up to the election because the polls -- >> where's the declaration of war? >> i agree. constitutionally it's very clear. there have been some people that have called for it, but you're right -- >> that's not his job. >> the speaker. >> that's boehner's job. >> i agree. here's where we are. well, 4,000 americans died and he didn't lift a finger as ramala and tikrit and fallujah,
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all these cities our american soldiers fought, bled and died for. here's my question, it's the one-year anniversary of health care, the illegal immigration, the flood of illegal immigrants crossing our border, add to that afghanist afghanistan, russia, crimea, ukraine, israel, gaza, the south china sea. is there -- add to that the economy. is there anything this president from your perspective has done well that you can say good job, sir? >> no. there's not a thing he's done well. here's the problem, sean. people who support big government, centralized government, liberalism, well, congratulations, you have it. and it's an absolute disaster. here's what's remarkable to me. he doesn't go back and actually look at something, have some circumspection say we're going to fix obamacare, let's pull back. maybe we bit off more than we can chew. it's full speed ahead, the foot on the gas pedal. now it's going to be executive
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imperial fiats for amnesty. he's looking for all these other areas where he can nationalize what shouldn't be nationalized. he's undermining what shouldn't be undermined. it's just like one thing after another after another. this guy does not want to be president. this guy continues to be that community organizer or d disorganize i should be sitting in the oval office throwing political mudballs in every direction he possibly can. have you noticed when he's happiest? he's happiest when he's campaigning trashing republicans, trashing conservatives, trashing capitalism, trashing the constitution. that's right. he's never really happy doing the job he's supposed to do. >> all right. great one, mark levine on stations all across the country. coming up, the first patient diagnosed with ebola in the u.s. remains in a dallas hospital at this hour. texas governor rick perry is standing by to talk about what precautions are being taken in his state. there are now people being
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quarantined. how people the infected patient may have come into contact with. that and more on this busy news night on "hannity." ♪
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trying to mislead you about the effects of proposition 46. well here's the truth: 46 will save lives. it will save money too. i'm bob pack, and i'm fighting for prop 46 because i lost my two children to preventable medical errors and i don't want anyone else to lose theirs. the three provisions in 46 will reduce medical errors and protect patients. save money and save lives. yes on 46. this a fox news alert. new details emerging tonight about the first case of ebola to be diagnosed on american soil. now while the dallas patient remains in hospital isolation, health officials are monitoring those who had close contact with him including a group of young
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children. here with the very latest in washington is "washington times" journalist alex sawyer with us. >> health officials have confirmed that one patient is in isolation in a dallas hospital after being diagnosed with ebola. thomas eric duncan had previously reported visiting west africa when he first arrived at the hospital last month and stayed for two days. but was never flagged for possibly carrying the deadly virus. the cdc says ebola cannot be transmitted like the common cold, but rather must be transmitted through bodily fluids. bright barton news reports that the immigration and nationality act gives the secretary of homeland security jeh johnson and the secretary of health and human services, the authority to have doctors evaluate immigrants applying for a visa. the law also passes the burden onto these immigrants coming into the united states to prove they do not have symptoms of the disease and have not been exposed. and officials in the center for immigration studies says the president already issued
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executive orders halting deportations for illegal immigrants who might be deported back to a country who has had an ebola outbreak. but he's not done anything to protect american citizens. under the law the administration could stop all flights coming into the united states from any country who is have been impacted by the ebola outbreak. health officials say an outbreak in the u.s. is unlikely as long as the virus is contained. but the washington times reported that financial cuts and job cuts post-2008 at local and state health departments could create a problem if there was to be an outbreak on american soil. back to you, sean. >> alex, thank you so much. and in the wake of the ebola diagnosis in dallas, questions are being raised about whether or not the president should have made these comments to the american people just two weeks ago. take a look at this. >> first and foremost i want the american people to know that our experts at the cdc and across our government agree that the chances of an ebola outbreak here in the united states are extremely low. >> i guess not so low.
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back in july the cdc also said that ebola did not pose a significant threat to the u.s. here with reaction is texas governor rick perry. he joins us tonight from dallas. governor, good to see you. thank you for being here, sir. >> john, it's a pleasure to be with you. thank you. >> here are the headlines that i have. first of all, the ambulance crew that transported this patient in dallas, now, they're under quarantine at this hour. we know we have a top infectious disease specialist saying many americans in fact will be infected by ebola. i'll give you the details about that in a minute. you have cdc saying ebola can be contacted while standing within three feet of an infected person. and in dallas there was a report out today that the ebola patient may have already infected up to 12 americans. so these are more serious headlines than what the federal government's leading us to believe. what's your take on the ground? >> well, obviously we take this extremely seriously in texas. and, you know, we would rather
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have not had this ebola virus show up in the united states at all. but if it had to show up somewhere, that presbyterian hospital where this patient is being in isolation is one of the most technologically advanced, has some of the finest equipment, more importantly passionate and compassionate men and women who are there serving. and i want to make it really clear that this isn't an outbreak. this is one case. and the people of the state of texas, the dallas officials that we're working with, both the mayor and the county judge and dallas health officials, the cdc has been a very willing participant and partner in this. of course the state health director. and we've got a great team of people in control of this. this person's in isolation. we have the other, i think it's 18 people, in total that are being monitored at this particular point in time. i think it's very important for the people of the state of texas and the city of dallas to know
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that this situation i think is well in hand. but very important that we continue to keep this individual isolated and those others monitored. and hopefully this will be the end of this event. >> all right. there is a story that came out, our own john roberts reporting, in a pattern they see often in liberia in the capital the family of the woman, her name -- anyway, took her by taxi to a hospital with mr. duncan's help on september 15th after failing to get an ambulance at her parents. she was convulsing and seven months pregnant, turned away from the hospital for lack of space. the family said it took mrs. williams home and she died latder that evening. so in those countries where there's widespread infection and no medical infrastructure, these people are dying. it's not so much the case here in america. but it's still instilling fear
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out there. what do you say to those people? >> absolutely. i think there's two issues here. one is that we do have an infrastructure in place, incredibly capable, professional. in africa and many of those countries they don't. i think the united states has a role to play in that. we have the cdc i think has stood up 130 individuals more than they ever have outside the united states before. we have our military there. we have technologies that hopefully will be available to those countries and if the u.s. can play a major humanitarian role in this. and while that's going on, we need to do everything that we can to make sure that we're screening properly, that we're putting clear procedures into place into those countries that have ebola that individual who is are traveling back to the united states are properly screened. and then obviously when those individuals that are showing any symptoms that we get them tested as soon as we can. i'm very comfortable that the
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professional way that texas has handled this, that presbyterian hospital has done a great job -- >> it's done a great job. i'm very aware of this. i don't think most people know this, it was on whitehouse.com that the very same day this liberian national entered this hospital later to be diagnosed with ebola later that day, the president signed an order suspending deportation of liberia nationals. you've been a -- i sat in a briefing with you and we found people -- i heard people coming from syria and yemen and afghanistan and pakistan is -- was that a good idea of the president to do that? >> you know, i don't think it was. but the fact is we have to have our borders secure. and i think whether it's a human health side or on the side of keeping people out of this
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country that want to do harm not just harm to our citizens from the standpoint of coming into this country and maybe an act of terror but those criminal elements. making sure our border is secure should be one of the most important jobs of the president of the united states. and as i've shared with you and the people of this country, if washington is not going to secure the border, the people of texas will. we have done that. we are affecting it. and we're seeing those apprehensions headed in the right direction going down substantially. >> maybe shouldn't take the government to so long to identify what happened in oklahoma nearby you as an act of terror. they have a full-scale investigation now, governor. i think i already know the answer looking at this guy's facebook page. >> you know, i said the other day that the white house is going to have to deal with this. he's going to have to get straight to the point here.
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we know what's going on. and the idea that this is everyday workplace violence, americans know that's not the case. >> we're being lied to every day. >> goes by without pointing out the fact this was most likely an act of terror is not in the best interest of america. >> governor, good to see you again. thank you for being with us. when we come back, my one-on-one interview with a boston area imam who said had nothing to do -- a crisis engulfed the administration. juan williams and best-selling author david limbaugh will be here. right here. with a control pad that can read your handwriting, a wide-screen multimedia center, and a head-up display for enhanced driver focus. all inside a newly redesigned cabin of unrivaled style and comfort. ♪
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not a member at war with islam. islam teaches peace. isil is not islamic. no religion condones the killing of innocence. and the vast majority of isil's victims have been muslim. >> that was president obama recently stating that despite the horrific events out of iraq and syria and oklahoma, islam is a religion of peace. well, my next guest, a boston area imam, he claims the islamic religion is being harmed by the acts of radical extremists saying "every time the word isis is mentioned and it's mentioned hundreds of times, islam is being pushed into the middle of that. they are abusing islam. that is not islam. i recently sat down to discuss the brutal beheading in oklahoma and much more. take a look. watch. thank you for being with us. >> thank you. thank you for having me. >> i read your comments. you said that this incident, you said that if it was influenced by islam, i will regret it.
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i appreciate you saying that. but here's what we know. we know he was a convert to islam. we know that he got fired for arguing about whether women should be stoned to death because of his faith. we know that this came three days after the head of isis called for lone wolves to behead people. it seems ratherin controvertible to me that this guy represents radical islam. isn't that pretty obvious? >> my concern here is really to bring the religion into some matters in a way we can look inconsistent. for example, you talk about beheading. from may to now there were two cases in georgia and in london, england, two cases of people were murdered. and the victims were beheaded. >> okay.
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but you're missing the point. >> religion here, it's here like when you think out of case and bring islam into -- >> i'm not bringing islam into it. wait. this is frustrating to me. he was fired for advocating and trying to convert co-workers and talking about women being stoned to death. which by the way a lot of islamic countries under sharia law treat women like garbage. you do know that's true? >> it's not true. you are using an incident -- >> saudi arabia women can't drive. saudi arabia women can't be seen in public with men that they're not related to. sharia law under iran women do get stoned to death. gays get stoned to death. we can go through the treatment of women if they must be covered. and men can have as many wives as they want. women need four male eyewitnesses in some countries
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for rape. >> all right. let me tell you here to say in saudi arabia i agree with you. but to bring islam -- i disagree with you. so -- >> it's not just saudi arabia. >> allows certain things. i will say i'm against it. >> okay. i appreciate that. and you're against sharia in iran. and against women having forced to be covered. or women not being able to drive. or women needing four male witnesses for rape. or gays being stoned to death. i'm sure you're against all of that. >> look, you have to say where. >> okay. >> in order for me to comment, then if you tell me in iran -- >> listen. there are more secular islamic states like turkey although they're getting more strict by the day. grant it. >> okay. you tell me -- >> excuse me. then you have entire countries where women are forced to cover. it's a very common practice.
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>> where? >> in egypt when muslim brotherhood was in charge, saudi arabia. we can go to iran. we can go to turkey. women even under their own households if they are married to a strict islamist, then they're going to have to do things like that. >> okay. i was an american commissioner. and i was an american diplomat. i went to saudi arabia with my commissioner's colleagues. and i stood and i criticized many things of what the saudis are doing. so when we come to -- >> do you think women -- >> -- interpreting islam. >> yeah. but say a husband's marry today a wife and the woman decides she wants to wear western clothes and not cover. there's a conflict among those in those countries. >> look, those are countries. and any act of oppressing people
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i'm against it. >> okay. i'm glad you said that. >> you do not force people -- yes. you cannot force people to adopt islam. islam is to be practiced at will. >> okay. >> and any attempt to force women to dress up in this way or that way is unislamic. >> all right. i appreciate it, imam. thank you. >> we cannot assume god's role on earth. it is god who judge people. we cannot be gods. >> all right. i appreciate you being with us. thank you. coming up, despite the sudden resignation of secret service director julia pierson, a crisis of confidence has engulfed the nation's capital. is it possible for the president to get control? i'll get reaction from juan williams and david limbaugh as this busy news night continues on "hannity." [ male announcer ] tomcat bait kills up to 12 mice,
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♪ i thought it'd be bigger. ♪ ♪ (dad) there's nothing i can't reach in my subaru. (vo) introducing the all-new subaru outback. love. it's what makes a subaru,a subaru. a fox news alert. the director of the united
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states secret service is out. earlier today in washington julia pierson submitted her resignation to the secretary of homeland security. >> director pierson offered her resignation because she believed it was in the best interest of the agency. the secretary agreed with that assessment. the president did as well. over the last several days we've seen recent and accumulating reports raising questions about the performance of the agency. and the president concluded that new leadership of that agency was required. >> now, while the white house attempts to move beyond the scandals that have rocked the secret service, controversy continues to engulf the president. here's why, because we have a commander in chief who has fumbled america's response on isis. that poses the greatest threat to our homeland since 9/11. and he did so because he continues to underestimate the rise of radical islam not only around the globe but right here at home even in america's heart
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land. he can't even say what's happened in oklahoma is an act of terror. whether it's ebola, secret service, isis, the ongoing investigation in oklahoma, i'm not surprised there's a crisis of confidence in the administration. here to respond author of "new york times" best-seller "jesus on trial," a lawyer confirms the truth of the gospel david limbaugh and also my attorney, and fox news analyst juan willia williams. first of all, earlier today the white house was defending this woman. earlier today. that's number one. number two, we've gone from the jayvee team. now it's an all-out war on isis, that's less than one year, that's nine months. then of course we have the president saying, you know, they cross a red line in syria, they'll be consequences. no consequences. then we won't arm the opposition. said this a month ago in syria. now it's the heart of the president's plan to arm the opposition. even you as his biggest supporter, and i think you're right up there at the top of the
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heap. >> i think you're a contributor. >> i think you're half of his biggest critics. >> you're right there with msnbc. defend the indefensible. >> what? the health care? >> one year ago $2 billion later and the website still is awful. >> can i ask you a question? do you ever look at facts? i mean, because the reality is not even republicans running for office trying to win votes are using any attack on health care because the american people know it's working for them. it's reduced the number of uninsured people. >> $2 billion website. david, i can have somebody build a website for a few thousand dollars. it'd probably work better. >> you know, 60% -- i just saw a poll, juan, that 60% of the people still oppose obamacare. so i don't know where you're getting your facts. >> david, i appreciate that. >> poll came out today. >> david, well, let me just say something to david first.
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david, i really liked your book. >> thank you. >> i found it very valuable. now back to sean and you. let me just say -- >> thank you. >> -- on this obama thing you got to keep in mind especially when it comes to health care a lot of the opposition comes from people who think we should have single payer. they think it should go much farther. >> you're living in a fantasy. >> oh, my gosh. >> david. >> yeah. i can't criticize him. he complimented my book. the u.s. is captive to obama's narcissism, his leftist ideology and his partisan political interests. that's what keeps him from seeing isis as a threat. that's what caused his precipitous withdrawal from iraq. he won't put boots on the ground because this is bush's dirty war. he can't get re-engaged in it. his credibility is on the line. plus, he's not engaged -- i don't think he plays golf to get away from the stress. i think he's not on the job anyway. it's just for fun.
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this guy is not reading his briefings. unlike president bush, he doesn't have a personal briefer tell him. and he doesn't ask him questions. he gets them in written form. as far as we know he's not even reading them. because if he did read them and as you pointed out, sean, it's pretty criminal in terms of what we saw the 2012 rise of isis. we knew what would happen if we withdrew from iraq. >> can i jump in here? >> juan, wait a minute. >> okay. >> the president now has warned after he trashed the intelligence community, he was warned what would happen in iraq. he was warned about the rise of isis. he let those gains that we had made, the war we had won, dissipate because he wouldn't act. le me run through this. >> no, let me answer -- >> healthcare.gov, the cia, benghazi, ukraine, russia, afghanistan, crimea, syria, iraq, iran, i mean, juan, it's imploding. open your eyes. get out of obamaland. wake up. >> the problem is even as you
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have this long indictment, which is so true -- no, it's not honest. if it was honest objective, you'd really get me. you don't get say the secret service is his fault. you're telling me obama is putting himself and his family's life at risk. >> i'm saying he's incompetent. earlier today they were praising this woman. >> yeah. well, you would think that sean hannity would say you don't throw people under the bus, but guess what he got the resignation within a day. that's tremendously effective. >> defending the indefensible. >> how are you going to blame the guy for the breakdown of security around his family? >> his approval rating, david, is now 35%. we're now 34 days outside of a midterm election. what impact is it? >> that's an undeserved high. and he's got reverse coattails. he's going to get destroyed. he's destroying his party along with the country. there's no moral clarity with this guy. he gave that u.n. speech saying
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religious extremism from all religions should stand down. there's no extremism from the christian religion going on. >> we'll bring you both back next week. >> -- american people disagree. >> coming up, thank you both. an nfl player drops to his knees, prays during a game, gets penalized. now the league's reversing the call. (cheering) yeah!! touchdown! who's ready for half time? ok i'm going to draw something up new... who ate the quarterback? share what you love with who you love. kellogg's frosted flakes. they're grrreat!
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trying to mislead you about the effects of proposition 46. well here's the truth: 46 will save lives. it will save money too. i'm bob pack, and i'm fighting for prop 46 because i lost my two children to preventable medical errors and i don't want anyone else to lose theirs. the three provisions in 46 will reduce medical errors and protect patients.
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save money and save lives. yes on 46.
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>> the flag came when he dropped to his knees in an islamic prayer the rule book prohibits celebrations on the ground. nfl speck spokesman says refs should allow it in cases involving religious expression. with us in the, is imus and senior correspondent, geraldo, the only guy with one name in the business what do you think, geraldo? >> i'm och yoesed to prayers,
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muslim prayers -- i think everyone should be forced to do the puerto rican salsa dance. if everyone prays to jesus. >> i does sting in the wake of the isis horrific atrocities. i do say as long as he wasn't doing the muslim mickey shuffle and screaming "death to america" then, yes. >> it's been known -- >> have you been to the school of bo beedle? >> regarding the state of the nfl they should encourage prayer. if you want to pray, go for it. >> it's cool. guys from all teams, even refs
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sometimes pray. i'm cool with that. >> it is a pig skin classic football game. however, they don't make it with pigs anymore. >> controversy is there. >> hindu and bahai, what about the satan worshipers? >> can they light wiccan candles? >> i want the hustle in the end zone the whole offensive line. >> do it. >> yes. >> we have video of moroccan soccer fans chanting. watch this. >> i say radical islam is the
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new naziism. that is frightening because those of crowds of people. >> i think if you're surprised to see sunni muslims celebrating isis, then you don't remember when you cheered twin towers going down. >> this is pre-september 11th. this president is weak, pathetically weak. >> this is scary, assuming translation is correct. >> it they're saying acronym that can be applied to the islamic state. >> it's spreading. you have british jihad i want to see it go to italy so we can say italian ices. >> if you're cheering for isis, you're cheering for rape, torture and degredation of women.
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>> why aren't liberals more outraged? >> they should be. >> i'm not sure liberals are not outraged i think the beheading of sotloff made them -- >> coming up more "hannity" right after the break.
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we know we're not the center of your life, but we'll do our best to help you connect to what is. but we'll do our best to help you connect to what is. ...and tkind of like you huffing sometimes, grandpa.
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well, when you have copd, it can be hard to breathe. it can be hard to get air out, which can make it hard to get air in. so i talked to my doctor. she said.. doctor: symbicort could help you breathe better, starting within 5 minutes. symbicort doesn't replace a rescue inhaler for sudden symptoms. symbicort helps provide significant improvement of your lung function. symbicort is for copd, including chronic bronchitis and emphysema. it should not be taken more than twice a day. symbicort contains formoterol. medicines like formoterol increase the risk of death from asthma problems. symbicort may increase your risk of lung infections, osteoporosis, and some eye problems. you should tell your doctor if you have a heart condition or high blood pressure before taking it. grandfather: symbicort could mean a day with better breathing. watch out, piggies! child giggles doctor: symbicort. breathe better starting within 5 minutes. call or go online to learn more about a free prescription offer. if you can't afford your medication, astrazeneca may be able to help.
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are the largest targets in the world, for every hacker, crook and nuisance in the world. but systems policed by hp's cyber security team are constantly monitored for threats. outside and in. that's why hp reports and helps neutralize more intrusions than anyone... in the world. if hp security solutions can help keep the world's largest organizations safe, they can keep yours safe, too. make it matter. that is all the time we have left this evening we hope you'll record "hannity" the series right here.
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also hope you'll start your day with "fox and friends" we'll see you back here tomorrow night. the o'reilly factor on o. tonight: >> we have four dead americans. was it because of a protest or for guys out for a walk one night who decided they would go kill some americans? what difference at this point does it make? >> that famous hillary clinton sound bite speaks to accountability. now another scandal with the secret service. we'll have the inside story. >> an individual traveling from liberia has been diagnosed with ebola in the united states. >> should the united states deny entry to people in west africa? that's being discussed and we will talk about it with john stossel. >> i want to end this debate so racism. [ laughter ]