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tv   Your World With Neil Cavuto  FOX News  April 16, 2024 1:00pm-2:01pm PDT

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my name is dana bellefeuille, and my husband and i own the village bakery located in hayden, idaho. our mission is to employ people with different abilities. tiktok is allowing us to show what acceptance looks like on a day-to-day basis, here at the bakery. this is a community of just complete and utter love. it's the people that lift you up when you're down. people on tiktok do that on a daily basis, and i've never found a community like that, ever. >> martha: that's the story for today, folks. thank you for joining me, always good to have you with us and the story goes on tomorrow so we look forward to joining you then. "your world "starting just a few seconds and a looks like it's closing positive territory. asked you back here tomorrow. >> ♪ ♪ >> neil: -- the push to
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dump the speaker of the house and get rid of the cabinet secretary while everyone is that it. everybody, i'm neil cavuto. first want to go to capitol hill with the latest on the move right now to make mike johnson may be a former speaker. was going on there? >> his speakership is required -- today thomas massey joined forces with marjorie taylor green cosponsoring her motion to vacate the speaker of the house and he is basically along with her demanding that the speaker announced that he is going to resign. not really having the intent to activate that motion to vacate, he does not want to throw a house -- house into cara -- johnson is calling their bluff saying that he's not going anywhere. >> i am not resigning and it is in my view and absurd notion that someone would bring it vacate motion when we're simply here trying to do our jobs. it is not helpful to the cards, is not helpful to the country, it's not helpful --
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upping the house republicans advance our mark -- agenda which is in the best interest of the american people. >> this is -- he announced last night that he'll divide up israel, ukraine and taiwan into three separate -- very upset over the lack of border provisions in all of this. we feel this is giving democrats exactly what they want and by the way count johnson's foreign aid plan may not be going anywhere right now. we were supposed to be expecting to see bill tech sometime today grandmother is still have not come out and some members are now telling us that they could be around here this weekend. >> neil: we'll be around this weekend. aishah hasnie on capitol hill. >> here you can hear ye, here you mark all persons are commanded to keep silent on pain of imprisonment while the house of representatives is exhibiting to the senate
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of the united states articles of impeachment against alejandro mayorkas mayorkas. >> neil: the house will bring articles of a beach -- for genomic security secretary alejandro mayorkas out over his handling of the border. -- >> good afternoon. we have with impeachment trials for former president trump in recent years but this was the scene not witnessed in a half-century and a half. outstanding impeachment articles to the senate for a member of the president's cabinet alejandro mayorkas faces two articles of impeachment calahar said mayorkas broke the law and violated the public trust. >> in right of the inability of an injured party to seek judicial relief -- to comply with federal immigration laws, impeachment is congress' only viable option. >> senators listen as green
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percent of the articles but nothing happens until tomorrow at 1:00 pm eastern. is when the senate's words in senators as jurors. is also where democrats could try to dismiss the child without a final verdict. >> and i have said repea repeatedly, we want to address this issue as expeditiously as possible. impeachment should never be used to settle a policy agreement, the policy disagreement. >> mayor chris -- mayorkas was not required to be in the senate tamer for green to read the articles but he earned lectures from gop members of the homeland security committee at a hearing today. >> the consider to be a success? >> i consider them to be a tremendous success in advancing the safety and security of the american people. >> you consider your administration of the department of homeland security to be a success? >> with a rideau centre -- [laughter] >> senate republicans about to stop all senate action unless the senate completes
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the trial. it's about the math. it only takes 51 votes to dismiss hi neil? >> so then it all goes away. >> that's right. that's it, 22 senate trials have been held before, we are told that this will be the only one that will not go all the way to rendering a verdict. >> neil: well. think you very much for that. chad pergram. camrose arena republican senator from the beautiful state of wyoming, is the republican consulate chair as well. senator those are some daunting numbers that had relayed that this could all prove a waste of time. >> while the democrats seem unbelievably committed to just keeping these floodgates and illegal immigrants flowing in to the country and they're willing to go so far as to nuke the constitutional requirements to do it. they don't seem to be bothered by the crime, luka magnotta cartels and the drug dealers and terror suspects coming in mayorkas has not
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been impeached for willfully, willfully unwilling to support or to the extent and to promote the laws of this country. he is not doing it and that is why this is so important. there only two times in the history of the country cabinet members have been impeached and no, they don't want to do it trial the democrats are trying to block in trial because they know the evidence is so devastating that it will hurt them in november. their specific democrats senators and everyone of was came together to try to block it trial. the american people deserve a trial come with her cervical debility. the democrats don't want it and they're trying to stop it right now. >> neil: don't americans deserve some progress on this issue itself, senator? i mean, republicans are blocking a bipartisan measure not seem to be very promising until donald trump came and said this is a waste of time, don't do that, this after the big election-year issue for us. no matter know what you're sentiment, i want to be clear, but republicans botch
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a chance to deal with a chance -- crisis as well. >> well what we know is the president of the united states refuses to enforce the law. there is one on every -- refusing to -- enforce the law of the land. we can pass anymore not if a president refuses to enforce them, what difference does it -- [laughter]
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-- for the first time in 140 some years. to me -- >> neil: all republicans. just republicans. >> there is credible, strong evidence to be presented to presented to the -- united states people and yet chuck schumer refuses to do it. every time there has been an impeachment, neil, and the entire history of the united states and there has been less than two dozen other has always been a trial unless the person has resigned. right now there is not happening. chuck schumer is rewriting the laws for impeachment so that if you get a future president impeached and a member of his own party is in the majority in the senate, it means that there is unlikely to be an impeachment trial there. other villagers follow this schumer playbook. this is the new presidents on impeachment and exchanging the entire history of the country and basically in violation of the constitution section one, article three. >> neil: so the -- who
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sticks republicans disagree, i just out for lunch or walk? >> people are going -- that's why you have a trial. to present the audio-mac evidence and there is compelling evidence and people are not supposed to make a decision until after the trial has been completed. the evidence is presented, the american people can listen in, call their elected representatives, told them what they believe. and then have a statement in may and stay that way based on the evidence presented at trial this is the evidence that joe biden doesn't want presented, chuck schumer document presented in every democrat on the ballot this november doesn't want presented because they will lose as a result. >> neil: we'll watching very closely. senator, think you very much for taking the time. senator barrasso in the beautiful state of wyoming updating you right now -- over the weekend. the united states and western powers county united nations all telling israel don't even try. us from general david pretorius on that, after th this. >> ♪ ♪ lord,
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>> neil: we don't want the israelis to respond kindly when there is one that is released respond. most of the g7 nations come to every leader, emmanuel macron, do not respond cannot do anything, take the win answered this response out payment under general david pretorius the former cia
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director and you tire -- what he makes of the pressure on israel to stand down and not agitate up. general, good to have you. what do you make of this now, universally everyone seems to be saying all right israel can he survive this think i could've been a lot worse. let's not make it bigger, cease-and-desist. they're not going to do that so far. what do you make of that? >> while this is a situation i think in which where would you stand on this issue depends on where you set. if you're sitting in washington or london or paris and these other capitals that have been asking israel to take the win is because you concerned that a further escalation of violence can't disrupt freedom of navigation in the gulf which would spite -- spite prices and you will see a real impact on the global economy. on the other hand if you set in tel aviv or jerusalem and i talked with a member of a war cabinet yesterday mor morning, they feel compelled to make a response.
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this was an end presented -- over 300 drones crews missiles and surface to surface missiles, never happened before, and a rat -- and attack directly from iranian soil and also from some of their proxies in the country surrounding israel, yes the defense was extraordinary, health in very substantially by u.s. assets which took out about one third of those different projectiles headed to israel, but israel has to make a response i think in this case and have been very clear about that. the question is can they thread the needle in responding sufficiently that it shows that this has to cease so that in their view returns is restored without escalating the situation further, without making iran feel that they must take yet another strike -- >> neil: that's easier said than done, in general, and we don't -- if iran actually has a nuclear capability and if it does then this -- we don't
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know for sure but i'll defer to you on that but there are a lot of people saying -- you worry about that if it does get into something more? >> sure. of course. again iran has a lot more -- number 1 dated coherently launched a huge number of again missiles can drones and so forth but there is a bit of performative nature to this he telegraphed this week in advance. everyone was ready and this was a very complex operation because you have u.s. central command assets, you have obviously the israeli assets in the uk reportedly jordan maybe even some other countries so the coordination of this is really quite extraordinary. and that layered missile control and anti- air defense of israel reproved yourself in this case, i don't caillouet slinging an arrow in the patriot.
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but how can they thread the needle? that's what they're debating. can they pull this off? and they actually something that is sufficient to restore deterrence in their view without forcing further escalation. and there is a big concern. >> neil: almost anything it seems that israel would do the current general, might weren't or the iranian skill would want a list response in this -- their part is this escalation of your. you worry about it especially when the arab world has made it very -- -- in fact supported israel in this move, saudi arabia, uae, jordan, et cetera, are standing outside if israel does anything more. where you see this going? >> while you are assuming that it has to be some great kinetic event. it is absolutely possible they can carry a variety of other options i don't want to get into all the details here but obviously there are options in cyberspace, some other options available in covert action, clandestine action and so forth. any to be something that iran
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knows that israel has taken action. they may not even want to announce it although they probably will be a need to leave that a very least. but again i think there maybe ways but that is what they're debating. that is why it has taken ti time, that's why they are saying there will be a time of place of our choosing. because they have to be concerned again that there is still a lot more that iran can draw them and it can go back and forth and they really need to keep their eye of course at the end that of the day on finishing the task in gaza as benny gantz a member of the war cabinet former minister of defense quoted here don't send the fire department to extinguish 80% of the blaze family need to get those final four out of 24 must battalions and then they need to figure out how to get some of the leaders and also how do prevent hamas from constituting. there is a big concern which we've already seen manifest when hamas went back in the al-shifa hospital after the israelis cleared early and then left it.
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>> neil: general, thank you very much for taking the time. general david petraeus following all these fast-moving elements -- we don't know how our skirmish turns into something much more involved coming -- elected sixties, and like the fear that we could go through something just as volatile if we're not careful. doris kearns goodwin with what's at stake after this pc back my grandchildren, they're sixth generation of dancers. it's what my family is all about. i thought i knew a lot about our irish roots. i was surprised to learn so many more things from ancestry. 1892. oh and here's the boat they came over on. there was a julie healy, a mary healy, this is all their names? yes, yes. wow. generalized myasthenia gravis made my life a lot harder. but the picture started changing when i started on vyvgart. ♪
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thanks brandon. with usps ground advantage®. ♪ i'm patriotic kenny. and, hi, i'm amanda on tiktok. my scooter broke down. i went into a depression. how do you feel about that? pretty sad. and i posted it to show that kenny's not always happy. within 24 hours people had donated over $5,000. no, you're kidding. we set up the patriotic kenny foundation to give mobility scooters to veterans. it has changed my life tremendously. none of this would've happened without tiktok. >> ♪ ♪ >> neil: [laughter] >> mr. trump: i was paying a lawyer and mark is -- down as illegal experts -- aledo market down illegal expense. the exactly what it was demek and you get invited over that? i should be right now in
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pennsylvania, in florida. and many other states. north carolina. georgia. campaigning. >> neil: did you make of donald trump's cash money trail going on at new york's premier -- noah segall her they're trying to select juries. and incense sticks were chosen today. they're having a double overtime agreeing on who will be on that augustine panel. but again this could go on for another six weeks or so but it occurs in a presidential election year and that always reminds you of dora kearns goodwin. who follows these -- doors kearns goodwin, looking back, and great times with her wonderful former husband who passed away about going back in to the sixties period. doris good to have you. >> thank you, lead to be with you as always. >> neil: i was thinking of the timing and the way -- sure enough this was the backdrop of what's going on with donald trump.
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this is a crazy election ye year, the closest maybe we can talk to turbulent times or turbine election like 1968 -- but still, what do you think? >> it's an interesting thing. each time a person is living through a period that is historic and then -- and turn of the 20th century with teddy roosevelt there was a big one. great depression 1932. 1968 was a very turbulent one. anything is that while we are living through it, we don't know how it ends to make trial is a historic fact but what really matters is how the trial and, how that affects the election. do people accept the regular trial how do they accept the election? we don't know that your. we know now that the civil war ended with the emancipation secure. know the great depression ended with a mobilization for world war ii. know the allies won world war ii so we can look happier those periods. this one is our --
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>> neil: but prior chapters in prior books in america we always get threw it. someone emerges, we ourselves to someone who will -- or we ourselves emerge to our better angels. it sometimes takes a long time. sixties was that battle. >> and it's up to us, is always the citizens. you can't be looking for here use -- when lincoln was -- he said don't call me that. it was he at their slavery movement and the union soldiers that did it all >> neil: you harken back to a very different time in the 1960s. and characterizes as more of a love story met -- anadrill awfl after all the time you guys are kind of running
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around and into each other, he didn't know each other -- didn't work with each other. records he is the result like figure who was there for some of the most amazing periods in our history. how did he end up like that? >> i'm not sure i understand. i mean i think that it was this mickey was in public service at a time when the sixties was one of those most pivotal moment in our country's history but he started out working for jfk. here in the campaign, he's on the plane. and then he works in the white house. is there with the birth of the peace corps. is a nice -- night that jfk is killed and he gets the eternal flame. then he leaves and goes to lbj. is there for the weak speeches of lbj. and then there we shall overcome state -- then he is with mccarthy in new -- and goes with bobby kennedy that his closest friend and is with him when he died so somehow he would just happens to be a maybe his talents brought him to lose places for fate brought him to his -- but it certainly was the lack.
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>> neil: is one thing that comes through of course you work for lyndon johnson but your husband didn't have the great view of him. i think early on in your book when you talked about john kennedy had chosen him as his vise president. he said i guess in a sense we all profiled him. he was from the south, immediately suspect when -- on matters of civil rights. -- that was at the core of our campaign. soo he was kind of kicking and screaming going into lbj all the more so after the jfk assassination. you had an entirely different view that lga -- lbj wasn't so bad but how did you reconcile that? >> would have been really was not even after he went to work with lbj he had great respect for him and really loved him. i mean no one the heyday of his own career to be working on civil rights and voting rights and medicare and medicaid. >> johnson didn't hold any grudges voted? >> johnson never fully
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trusted him because he was with kennedy. there was a clear fault line between those two parts so in a certain sense when he left and became friendly with bobby and worked on his campaign and was close to jackie then johnson really no longer trust him and they broke in the two of them broke a relationship had been pretty strong during the 1964-5 period. sightsee johnson and end of his life in those years i went to work on the memoirs and i saw a man who talked to mika who i felt empathetic for, i had been against the ward too but i believe that what he had been domestically so i was always a lyndon johnson girl and he was always a kennedy guy and we argued about it much of our lives but what happen is when we went through -- 300 boxes it was crazy, they went everywhere with us and finally when he turned 80 he decided to open them. he had been so scared about what had happened at the end of the sixties, so sad, that he didn't want to go back to the period of time but we started going through them from the beginning of the -- and it's failure to do history, chronologically. and began -- began to feel how he first about kennedy, how did he first about lbj.
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what you sign any change his mind when he work from him and change and again, then the war happened and we but we began to reconcile our own feelings as we went through the boxes that's partly why it was such an important -- >> neil: so it started with these 300 actors. i just turned 80 i guess i have to do something about this, sadly he passes away and you pick up the baton. but there had to be tough? >> it was a hard thing. the great thing about going through the boxes, however, was in the last years of his life when he got cancer, he was so happy to be exploring these boxes and reliving our youth's together he that -- that kept him going the everyday and when it was clear that he wasn't going to be able to finish the task because he made me promise that i would do that and as you say it was hard. i wasn't sure i could do it. it wasn't finished this love story of telling his story and i had to tell myself as an historian and not just as a biographer of him so that meant my normal research had to go on and had to interview up whole bunch of people who were in that same decade with me and it turned out to bring
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him to lie for me. have tried my whole life to bring pascal -- after that but now i had this guy who i was living with and he was my guy and i could go over the memoirs -- >> neil: [simultaneous talking] [laughter] i used to talk to franklin and elinor roosevelt, i used to talk to lincoln but they -- but now this was my guy and he would answer me and sometimes correct me so i finally decided that i could do it and in a certain sense my dream, my whole life as a historian in lake and allow people living now to learn from the past and learn from these great figures in there so much to learn from the sixties with all the troubles and the sadness, it was a time when people especially young people felt connected to the country. they wanted to do something bigger than themselves. it was a civil rights movement, it was the women's movement, the gay-rights movement. it was a time when people felt impelled to try and change things. i just wish we could feel that for young people today can develop their country and
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there was a sense that they were going to work to make it a better place. >> neil: when i talk to a lot of younger people when i first started out fox, was one of the other people here. know they just phishing but a lot of times always say, you know, there have been polarizing times in the past. to live through the sixties, i'm a little younger than you but i can remember living in atlanta after mark -- martin luther king was shot and that didn't go down well. and rbc then the bobby kennedy assassination. but we got threw that a very decisive time so when you hear people -- take a look at the selection and you talk about what's at stake and i remember in the book you talked about lyndon johnson and his opting not to run in 1968 hi he probably would've lost regardless. but you said it was an act of self-sacrifice, that freedom for some things but i didn't get -- >> what happen is that i think he knew on march 31st 1968 that the war was not going well and it was time to begin negotiations.
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he also new that he had done badly in new hampshire primary against mccarthy, that bobby was now in the race, wisconsin was coming up. >> neil: but bobby got into it after he dropped? >> bobby got in before the end is where the reason the thought of going against bobby was a terrible thing but he got in after mccarthy. but then he realized -- >> neil: i'm sorry, go ahead. >> then after johnson decided to withdraw from the race he believed -- i can only negotiate peace if they believe me that i'm not a candidate so i really do think it was partly that he figured he comes often in his life he wanted to do something larger. in the newspapers recorded that, his disapproval rating had been 57%, it went up to 57% approval rating, incredible and he went everywhere, people were clapping for him. he was about to go to hanoi -- hawaii to start negotiations and martin luther king was killed. so he came over and over again in her sixties but your general point is right. we had the strength in this
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country over and over again, we don't know where it will come from, we don't know where this next chapter is going to go but i somehow would not bet there were going to go through some of. >> neil: there are a lot of people -- you don't got his pilot placed on taking a leap your car who are tired of a rehash of the simulation we had four years ago and then the democratic party frustration even when joe biden -- the history on that is a little dicey. lbj did drop out and hubert humphrey did enter in, george wallace was a third-party candidate, we know what happened. we know richard nixon one. so when you hear that kind of talk today pressure on joe biden to do that, what do you say? >> well i think, you know, is a decision that only the president himself can make and i mean people from outside can make their judgements and what they want to have happened but we've got a system right now where the primary system is already closed up in a certain sense. and in another day, in other agent or whatever and conventions and the
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convention could have made a choice in the summer between both candidates. that is what is incredible to remember. we didn't know how to times who the nominee was going to be until july or august. and the campaigns didn't start until september. september 3rd was usually right after labor day, how much more fun there would be forever if we didn't have to live through these and thus campaigns as we do right now? and you trusted the party bosses then the two somebody would be right for the whole party tonight around. now finally there wasn't as democratically -- sometimes i wonder wonder -- going back to the smoke-filled rooms, who do we get from those humic we got lincoln, we got franklin roosevelt, we got teddy. >> neil: but we didn't get drunk and 80 that way, right? he dared to go on primaries and challenge that system -- >> and he knew that the voters wanted pick him because he was catholic you're absolutely right. >> neil: so your sense of where we stand today whether external term, the court battle in this president and dealing with all he's dealing with these are two old guys. are you anti- old guy?
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car are you on the? >> well i'm an old girl. [laughter] but i think the presidencies are really hard job and i think you look at the way lincoln aged catholic on the way obama aged. everyone of them is an enormous pressure job. just think of what we're doing -- potential iran and israel problems at home. ukraine. i mean the pressures on them are so great that you need energy, you need vitality, experience is a great thing to have. i mean there is a good thing to have. >> neil: winston churchill -- speak. >> winston was 90. he went on and on -- i wouldn't take winston right now even at 90. >> neil: i know that this is a great story, the sixties i think is more -- but i got the sense riding up -- and everything else he did, what a wonderful human being he was in a love -- you are very blunt about what you thought of him when he first met him, he was arrogant, material, all that. -- wonderful years of marriage and one of her child that. but looking back at that it
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makes us think of the people who served with the president, who at the time, you don't know were a lot of the people outside don't kn know. was out there now that impressively you? >> there is a good question. i mean you mean within us out of the wonder -- i think there probably people are governor's cup people who are state legislatures. there are people in this country who are emerging. that's what -- when you lincoln -- he was a state legislator, one german congress and people said he'd -- and it turned out to be our greatest presidents. and fdr was not clearly understood when he was in the state legislature either. it takes a while and they emerge on the scene and then the moment somehow creates the great opportunity for a person, you know, all of the -- so they can be remembered by history but then you have to be ready for those troubling times. >> neil: and most rights to that be bigger than their party, bigger than themselves. >> i mean what happens to the best of our leaders is
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somehow their ambition for themselves which they start out with almost all of us start with a mission for success. but at some point they decides there's something larger than themselves in the exhibition for the country and that's what lincoln had from the start. he wanted to be remembered for having done something worthy that people would know his name for being connected to something good in the emancipation population was that. it's my favorite story -- of having gone to a remote area of the carcasses were a group of wild barbarians who had never left that part of russia and ask them to tell stories of the equipment of history so i told them about napoleon and julius caesar and alexander the great and they stopped me and they said what you haven't told us about the greatest ruler of the more. we want to hear about that man who spoke with the voice of thunder, kulak like the sunrise, who came from the place called america that so far from here that if the young men to travel there he would be an old man when he wrapped. tell us what that meant, because of abraham lincoln. and the new reporter said what made him so great after all and he said will it
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wasn't that he was a great general as napoleon, not a great and a statesman as frederick the great but it consisted in his character come the moral fibre of his being. that's what we need in our country today. we need character in our leaders, character in her citizens. >> neil: while. you are to stick to this presidential historian, it seems to be working out. this is a little different, folks. this is very unlike you've seen from doris kearns goodwin. ever the more, this the one that blows it away because it's emotional. i want to -- so much. [laughter] doris kearns goodwin, highly recommended. we need it in these times. the risk of kidney failure with farxiga. because there are places you'd like to be. farxiga can cause serious side effects, including ketoacidosis that may be fatal, dehydration, urinary tract, or genital yeast infections,
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guess it's time to paint. ♪ behr behr behr behrrrr ♪ ♪ behr behr behr behrrrr behr behr behr ♪ ♪ behr behr behr behr behrrrr ♪ ♪ behr behr behr behrrrr behr behr behr ♪ ♪ behr behr behr behr behrrrr ♪ what is going on next - ♪ behr behr behr behrrr behr behr behr ♪ ♪ behrrr behr behr behr behr ♪ ♪ behrrrrr ♪ whether you're doing it yourself or hiring a pro, today let's paint. ♪ behr behr behr behrrrrr ♪ ♪ behr behr behr behrrrr ♪ - no, no. - sorry... exclusively at the home depot. >> ♪ ♪ [laughter] >> neil: wrapping up they two at the new york superior court will find our need for waiting to see donald trump has in the -- police
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department taking jurors and all that stuff. nate? >> hi, neil. a lot of progress on the two of criminal trial former president donald trump, six jurors have been seated so far. other juror -- taking the questionnaire right now well in new batch of 96 are hearing about the case for the first time so the jury's election process continues shortly after the judge admonished former president trump for monitoring and gesturing toward a prospective juror while his lawyers questioned her credibility. the judge said "i won't tolerate that, i will have any jurors intimidated in this courtroom." this comes on the da's offers his casket -- asking the judge to punish trump for allegedly violating a gag order for social media posts about michael cornish stormy daniels. de's hollett -- alvin bragg's office is -- or possibly sentenced trump to know more than 30 days in jail. judge rosharon -- meanwhile
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the jury selection process continues today and right now the court is preparing for opening statements on monday of next week. of course, the timing is very, very fluid. today things are extending a little bit beyond the 4:30 time where corn normally ends but it should be wrapping up shortly and the jury selection process continues back with her back to you. >> neil: thank you for that need for. when i go to site -- assignment, sometimes send me to -- i will. when bill hendricks -- he's back after this.
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what? i don't do that. this reminds me of my bike. the wolf was about the size of my new motorcycle. have you seen it, by the way? happy birthday, grandma! really? look how the brushstrokes follow the line of the gas tank. -hey! -hey! brought my plus-one. jamie?
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>> ♪ ♪ >> neil: >> will china come here? >> i think china considers themselves a -- and what that means to them is the reserve the right to operate in this environment. to have icebreakers how they're building more. i think that the partnerships that they have of here are not clear. 's are not sure that russians in china and -- on what the future of the arctic holds? >> neil: -- bill hemmer was there back from there, you were there what, three days? >> neil, i'm planning your next vacation for you, okay? >> neil: look like a cool place. >> is perfect below -- is
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perfectly. is 50 below, and your sleeping berth on the nuclear submarine is about 18 inches high, are you good for the? >> neil: actually that stop the whole thing right there. there's a battle foreground in this place. >> yes, it is -- there is and it will go on perks -- if you look to the top of the world top of the globe, you have eight nations that have arctic territory at the arctic circle. by far and away the country that leads totally in landmass is russia. >> neil: oh wow. >> about 80% of the natural gas that putting mines in the north of the arctic circle. there is a lot. shoulder -- the gentleman you saw in that video there is admiral david connell, amazing guy, for costar. very much concerned about how putting controls the water way routes on the northern edge of russia. when that ice melts which is an amazing thing in itself too because i was mentioning
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entering the commercial break were in the air for seven hours, neil. we'll land on the north coast of alaska in a town called dead horse. so appropriately named. that we change indoor arctic derek eichele another 200 -- 120 miles north. and is frozen elsewhere as the eye can see. and they tell you, you come back in august here couple weeks in september and it's all water. there is a real -- i'm a scientist are not a sailor, there is a hard thing to interpret. but that's what they say. the white house believes it will be blue by the year 2030. a lot of sign these dispute that including some of those that i talk to of there. but what it does is give you the ability to imagine now 20 years, 30 years from now, 40 years from now, maybe you could have a transpolar route or a big shipping company like maersk would be able to take a lot of goods and shorten the trip over the northern passageway. who controls that? people like connell make sure
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-- i don't want to give you the impression that this is going to look like the mediterranean sea because it never will. you will freeze over again. >> neil: but do they all play well at each other? >> at the moment i think they're dealing. look, this time of year and for most time of year, not much to do. i mean it's ice and it's snow and we pretty much have what you got, you know? stay warm okay because when the wind blows, neil. there is nowhere to hide. >> neil: adding the question on everyone's mind is how is the food there? >> under submarine they have the finest food in the u.s. military. >> neil: okay. >> and i think even you would agree with me. so yes, it's a great. >> neil: business not like a caprice -- >> in some regards it might be better. >> neil: okay. i look forward to it. bill hemmer america's newsroom, that he stopped --
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>> interrupts tomorrow so check it out. >> neil: a look forward to it, barely. thank you very much. bill hemmer on all of that. meanwhile the president making a speech -- page that the rich a their share after -- something tells me that kevin o'leary disagrees with the notion that are not, after this. >> ♪ ♪ the record straight about dupuytren's contracture. surgery is not your only treatment option. people may think their contracture has to be severe to be treated, but it doesn't. visit findahandspecialist.com today to get started. ( ♪ ) my back got injured very bad. i was off work for about a year. i heard about relief factor from my wife. i took it every day, three times a day, for three weeks. look at her and i said, "the pain is gone." and she said, i'm glad it helped. i said, "no, you don't understand. it's gone." you, too, can feel better every day with relief factor, a daily supplement that fights pain naturally. call or go online now for our 3-week quickstart,
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>> tech: cracked windshield? schedule with safelite, and we'll come to you to fix it. >> tech vo: this customer was enjoying her morning walk. we texted her when we were on our way. and she could track us and see exactly when we'd arrive. >> woman: i have a few more minutes. let's go! >> tech vo: we came to her with service that fit her schedule. >> woman: you must be pascal. >> tech: nice to meet you. >> tech vo: we got right to work, with a replacement she could trust. we come to you for free! schedule now for free mobile service at safelite.com. >> singers: ♪ safelite repair, safelite replace. ♪ >> neil: all right, donald trump and the courthouse, joe biden trying to take advantage of that, popping up
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any keystone state, pennsylvania, for fairness and equity in the tax system. the rich pay their fair share, 25% minimum tax the wealthy should pay so they are all doing their part. kevin o'leary, shark tank investor, what he makes of that. kevin, what the president is saying -- not saying you but guys like you, you are getting with tax murder and you have to pay up. what do you think? >> this narrative has gone on forever. it's ageless. get everybody to pay their fair share. their determination of what the fair share is changes from administration to administration but the core issue -- and i think the way to look at it is -- america is the most successful economy on earth. two-thirds of the jobs are created by entrepreneurs, start companies, you do not want to tax them to oblivion. you want a fair share that is progressive for everybody so the more you make, the more tax you pay, that's fair, but also look at where you are in world competition, where you sit in the g20. you want to be in the middle.
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the minute you really start raising taxes and they become uncompetitive either at the state level, see everybody leaving new york and going to florida or texas or lower dirt know my jurisdictions where taxes are, same thing happens with countries. biden's proposals -- look, i admire what he wants to do -- but the more he taxes, the less growth there will be and that is the risk. >> neil: so the other risk is making people think that rich don't pay taxes. right now the top 1% account for almost half the taxes collected and by the way a lot of people say, they are also rich and make a lot of money but that is double the amount of wealth they represent in this country so they are paying that part but this is something that politically sticks, so how should they respond? how do you think those who are against this notion of just taxing the risk or taxes. matt should respond? >> to get rich, they had to be wildly successful. let's just take a bezos or what has happened with elon musk. they have created hundreds of
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thousands of jobs. they have created economies that are derivatives to companies they made. that is the essence of success in the economy. so picking on them and saying because they are successful, let's tax them more. i think elizabeth warren is trying that massachusetts and should ask how that is working out for her. are you still live there. sorted all my neighbors. now we live here in miami and we visit massachusetts because it's now taxachusetts. as long as there another place to go, that is how america was formed. taxation oppression by the british, and here we are. let's remember that lesson. >> neil: i'll put you down as a maybe on this thing. kevin, always good seeing you, thank you very much. dial finishing down 53 points, concern about not necessarily taxes going up but interest rates going up. here is "the five." ♪ ♪
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>> jesse

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