ike resigned, writing, under the present circumstances, i cannot be an effective leader. his offense -- a 2008 donation of $1,000 in support of california's proposition 8 to ban gay marriage. when ike's contribution was posted online last week, the progressive silicon valley community lashed out, accusing him of homophobia and bigotry. others suggested his resignation reflected the marketplace at work. >> it's just no longer in the free market palatable to hold these positions. there is not much of an interest in choosing products and services if we look at the national polling where the company has this type of bigotry in its past. >> but critics of the resignation say it shows the hypocrisy of the gay rights movement. >> they're constantly saying what they're seeking is tolerance, yet they are showing unbelievable intolerance for anyone who disagrees with them on issues. >> they call an apology from mozilla's chairwoman orwellian. she wrote, quote, our organizational culture reflects diversity and inclusiveness. under that interpretation, president obama may have been considered a bigot in 2008, too. >> in 2008, barack obama was against gay marriage, yet i haven't seen any attempt to force out other executives within mozilla, all of whom gave political donations to barack obama back in 2008 when he was against gay marriage. >> asked today whether there should be greater tolerance on this issue given the president's own evolving view on the topic, they declined to answer. >> i'm not going to be in a position to weigh in on decisions by private companies. >> just as a&e suspended phil robertson from "duck dynasty" for anti-gay comments -- >> if this is the gay rights movement today, hounding our opponents with a fanaticism more like the religious right than anyone else, then count me out. and tammy bruce said, i'm a gay woman appalled you caved to the gay gestapo. they argue in a piece that may or may not be tongue in cheek that all 35,000 people who contributed to california's proposition 8 should be, quote, purged. he adds, let's go get them. brett. >> more on this with the panel. thank you. what do you think about this story? let me know at facebook.com/bretbaiersr, or on twitter. >> a federal judge says he will order ohio to recognize out of state gay marriages. but the upcoming ruling by judge timothy black will not force ohio to perform same-sex marriages. the state said it will appeal the judge's order. now, a look at the march jobs numbers. the ones getting most attention, the labor department says the economy gained 192,000 jobs last month, a smaller increase than in february. unemployment rate was unchanged at 6.7%. there are, however, other much more alarming numbers. chief white house correspondent ed henry tells us what they are and what they mean. >> more troubling signs from president obama as he tries to keep control of the senate in the midterms by shifting focus from health care to the economy. while he can now tout 49 consecutive months of private sector job growth, jobs in manufacturing declined for the first time since july. and millennial unemployment is now more than double the national average at 14.5%. so top democrats like nancy pelosi today were still blaming the bush administration for a slow recovery. >> what i think 190,000 jobs is a good drop, we want more. i would have to note today, we have replaced all of the jobs lost under the bush economic policies and the recession that that took us into. it's taken this long to build back from that. >> pelosi was referring to the fact that 8.9 million private sector jobs have been created since 2010, countering the 8.8 million jobs lost during the recession. yet the real unemployment rate when you factor in people who have given up looking because they can't find a job is still a staggering 12.7%. >> there's a real sense among the american people things are not getting better and it looks like as long as we continue to stagnate here, democrats may be waiting for a life preserver that isn't coming before november. >> despite the president's victory lap over health care sign-ups on tuesday, the new law is still the butt of late night jokes. >> he said this means that obamacare is, quote, here to stay. he said, because if you think getting into the program was hard, just try getting out. literally impossible. >> no surprise, top democrats are flat out declaring they plan to shift the argument in the midterms away from health care. >> we have long said that aca will not be the defining issue of the 2014 elections. instead, it's going to be jobs, good paying jobs, and the decline of middle-class incomes. >> except the president's case on the economy is not so clear cut. since he's now had the reins for over five years. >> where's the recovery? >> ed, we think the jobs report was pretty encouraging in terms of what it says about our economic recovery. we're certainly not satisfied. we continue to believe there's a lot of work that can and should be done to strengthen our economy. >> next week alone, the president is planning to do at least three economic events, including a speech to the national action network, the surest sign yet he's planning to pivot from health care to jobs. this is a mixed bag. >> ed henry, thank you. stocks took a tumble today. the dow fell 160. the s&p 500 dropped 24. the nasdaq lost 110. for the week, the dow was up a half percentage point. the s&p 500 gained .4. the nasdaq fell .67. >> the soldier who killed three people and wounded 16 at ft. hood before killing himself had an argument with someone right before the shooting. but the motivation behind the slaughter remains a mystery. senior correspondent rick leventhal is in texas again tonight. >> it's a simple note from one of the ft. hood wounded to the staff at dar nall army center, showing strength and resilience. he wrote, let everyone know i'm doing good and we'll all get through this as a family and a team. rick perry and ted cruz visited with survivors and family members praising their spirit and determination. >> you'll see it in the eyes of the people you meet, in the handshake their give you, the strength of these people. they'll recover. they'll recover from this latest tragedy. they'll heal their wounds, and we will go forward. we'll learn lessons about what's occurred here and to minimize the chances of this ever happening again. >> ft. hood is a national treasure. the men and women who serve here, they protect our nation, they volunteered to risk everything to protect our freedom, to protect every american. and our heart breaks for the tragedy that has been experienced here. >> and we're learning more about the victims and hearing stories of heroism. the dead include argy sergeant timothy owens an iraq war vet from illinois, and danny ferguson who just returned from afghanistan and according to his fiancee, held a door shut that couldn't be locked to keep the shooter from getting into a room filled with soldiers. ferguson sacrificed his own life to save others. late this afternoon, the army confirmed the third fatality is carlos alberto luzany rodriguez, and he planned to retire soon after reaching the 20-year service mark. and also, ivan lopez's father released a statement saying, this situation is very painful. i ask for prayers for all the families affected. my son could not have been in his right mind. he was not like this. army investigators say lopez's mental health may have been a factor but wasn't the direct precipitating cause of the shooting. >> we do have credible information he was involved in a verbal altercation with soldiers from his unit just prior to him allegedly opening fire. >> meanwhile, the army's criminal investigation unit are still processing the huge crime scene. it's the size of two city blocks with 150 special agents assigned to the case, already interviewing more than 900 potential witnesses. and the shooter's weapon has been sent to atlanta for ballistics tests to four years. fox 4 in dallas with the clean-up from yesterday's severe storms which included softball-sized hail and at least two tornadoes. >> and this is a live look at san francisco from our affiliate there, ktvu. the big story there tonight is a rescue mission off the pacific waters of mexico for an infant who has fallen critically ill aboarded a stranded 36-foot sailing boat. the child is said to be suffering from a heart ailment. that's tonight's live look outside the beltway from "special report." we'll be right back. for hearburn? 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(mom) i'm so excited. potential candidate many expect to fight tooth and nail for the presidency in two years is calling for a kinder, gentler political discourse. tonight, carl cameron contrasts what hillary clinton is saying with what many democrats have been doing. >> in the most wide ranging remarks since stepping down as the obama administration secretary of state, hillary clinton leading all the presidential polls for 2016 tried to rise above the partisanship and dysfunctionality she says plagues washington by slamming its current practitioners. >> it's a moral issue. it's a political issue. and i want to get back to evidence-based decision making. there's too much that has gone on in our politics recently that is just pure ideology, pure partisanship. >> to some, it may seem hypocritical for a politician who prides herself as a liberal eager to run for the fight to denounce partisanship and she's at odds with the president's swiping of the right. this came at a lunch at the university of michigan this week. >> they would have to call this the stink burger or the mean-wich. >> the president relished mocking the opposition to obamacare as he again this week pronounced efforts to kill it futile. >> tall tales that have been told about this law have been debunked. there are still no death panels. armageddon has not arrived. >> the debate over repealing this law is over. the affordable care act is here to stay. >> clinton's been far more combative than that over the years despite her pleas now for washington to get along. during his president's presidency, she called the ri t right -- in 2008, it was one of the nastest in memory, and last night, she accused the media of biased coverage against women. >> the double standard is alive and well, and i think in many respects, the media is the principal propagator of its persistence. >> if it seems like pandering for a woman to attack media bias at a women's conference, it probably is, but no more so than conservatives revving up the right over media bias at their events. still, clinton is a former and perhaps future practitioner of bare-knuckle politics who is saying it ought to stop now. >> we'll see. health care experts say more fuzzy math from the administration tonight over obamacare. chief national correspondent jim ingle reports how the white house is trying to have it both ways while playing the numbers game. >> the president and his aides trumpeting the obamacare enrollment numbers as a success, but the administration didn't always see that number as something to brag about. >> 7.1 million americans have now signed up for private insurance plans through these marketplaces. >> though it remains unclear how many of those sign-ups have paid premiums in order to be officially enrolled or how many were previously uninsured, and even though officials are celebrating the 7 million mark, the white house once minimized numbers twice that large. the 14 million people in the individual insurance market who were faced with cancellations because their policies didn't have all the required benefits of obamacare. that created a huge political backlash, in part because the president had promised everyone could keep their plans and doctors, no matter what. so the president and his aides played the numbers down as just a small group. >> keep in mind that the individual market accounts for 5% of the population. >> 5% of the country's in the individual insurance market. a portion of that 5% is effected by the cancellation notices. >> because of the reaction, president obama asked state officials to allow the policies to be extended. 21 states, however, including california and new york, flatly refused. california alone had 900,000 individual policies cancelled, adding to a national total of several million. >> you look at the 7 million and you shave off the 20% who probably haven't paid, you've got about 5.5 million people, and that's roughly the number of people who were in the individual market and started having their policies cancelled. >> blue cross blue shield confirmed up to 20% of those enrolled have not paid their premium, and carney called the 14 million a sliver of the population even though it's double the amount of sign-ups glrb you need to look at the 7 million in the context of the u.s. population and that's about 320 million people. this program is going to insure about 2% of the total folks who live in the united states. >> so while the administration portrayed that 2% as a victory, the 5% facing cancellations was minimized. >> it can't be the case that, you know, 5% is no big deal and signing up 2% is a triumph. those two can't stand simultaneously. >> some who were canceled were forced into obamacare, adding to the enrollment numbers though they were not previously insured. >> still ahead, is the stock market rigged? a lot of people think so. first, is the u.s. really getting weaker? we'll look at the president's foreign policy 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discounters red tag sale, through sunday. ♪ mattress discounters ships in the flight 370 search area are now using sound locaters to look for the missing plane's data recorders. an australian navy vessel has an american device onboard that listens for the pings emitted from the recorders. a british submarine is equipped with similar gear. they have no specific information, though, on where to look. characterizing their choice as a best guess. >> a veteran associated press photographer was killed and a reporter wounded with an officer opened fire on them. it's the latest violence in the run-up to tomorrow's election. afghanistan is one of many hot spots on president obama's foreign policy radar. james rosen takes a look at some of the others. >> while president obama and his aides were scrambling to make obamacare deadlines, the world did not standidally by, the syrian civil war now in its fourth year surged past the bloody milestone of 150,000 deaths even as bashar al assad -- >> his days are numbered. >> -- now looks like he'll remain in power. rushy has 40,000 troops possibly with an invasion farther than crimea. armed forces from the north and south have exchanged artillery fire following missile testing. >> this is not an open-ended effort. >> john kerry's extensive work on a two-state solution for israel and the palestinians has come unglued and while iran is still complying with restrictions on the nuclear program under the six-month deal that expired in july, u.s. officials are uncertain whether tehran will abandon their quest for nuclear weapons. under some president obama's control, others not, have made the world more dangerous than ever before. >> the current circumstances that america is facing in the world are in some respects worse than in the previous couple decades. particularly because we have been sending signals of weakness to the world. >> when american leadership is weak, as i believe it is now, and most of our adversaries believe that, to be sure, because they're taking advantage of it, but sadly, most of our friends do, i think the world is actually a more dangerous place, and we're right in the middle of that right now, sadly to say. >> lawmakers on capitol hill, including some democrats, say president obama has always been more interested in domestic policy, but a spokesperson said he borrows into the weeds on foreign policy as well. >> he's deeply engaged in foreign policy. as some who worked on his election campaign on foreign policy, i know how important it is to him. >> some factors not under president obama's control which contribute to ours being a dangerous time, include reactors in nuclear affairs and the easy flow of data, such as was contained on the thumb drives of edward snowden. >> george w. bush is showing off his impressions of some of the people he had to deal with while in office. they're on displace in his library in texas. he began painting in 2012 after reading an essay on the subject by winston churchill. the fast food industry takes a stand against russian expansionism, and a republican senator blames the russians for being in the wrong place at the wrong time. we'll explain because the grapevine is next. geico motorcycle. see how much you could save. ♪ legs, for crossing. ♪ et...splashing. better things than the joint pain and swelling of moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis. if you're trying to manage your ra, now may be the time to ask about xeljanz xeljanz (tofacitinib) is a small pill, not an injection or infusion, for adults with moderate to severe ra for whom methotrexate did not work well. xeljanz is an ra medicine that can enter cells and disrupt jak pathways, thought to play a role in the inflammation that comes with ra. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections andancers have happened in patients taking xeljanz. don't start xeljanz if youe any kind of infection, unless ok with your doctor. 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to be to the current defast system locations, personnel, et cetera? >> under secretary cohen, i just wanted to -- i got a note saying i'm at the wrong hearing. >> oh, okay. >> i've got the right room number. but the wrong hearing. >> that would explain why i didn't know anything about this letter. >> the senator took the mishap in stride, tweeting in part, i think the russians have been messing with my schedule. the hoosier republican did get the answer to his question in the correct subcommittee hearing around the corner and on the left. one disgruntled court stenog rfy may end up doing what a bevy of defense attorneys could not, getting their client's convictions thrown out. the new york post reports the court reporter repeatedly typed, i hate my job, along with other gibberish, instead of testimony. the botched transcripts are allowing criminals to claim evidence is missing. one lawyer handling the appeals says, quote, i never had a situation where a single court reporter was responsible for so much damage. this since fired stenographer admitted screwing up on purpose. finally, fast food is taking a standard against an old cold war enemy. mcdonald's has decided to temporary close its restaurant in crimea. it did not mention the ongoing tension in the area, instead citing operational concerns beyond its control. >> a moscow contention wants to retaliate by closing all the mcdonald's chain stores in ri russia. and here in the u.s., mighty taco posted this soon, banning president putin from its restaurants saying no one likes a bully so stop picking on people and maybe you will be welcomed back to mighty taco. >> there's been a lot of buzz in the past few days about allegations the stock market is rigged and not in your favor. fox business network's senior washington correspondent peter barnes is here tonight to tell us the federal government is involved. >> attorney general eric holder today became the latest official to announce an investigation into a wall street practice known as high frequency trading. it allows super fast buying and selling with computers with special access to stock prices and orders in milliseconds, 1 thousandth of a second earning tiny shares of pennies which adds up given they trade up to 28 million shares a day. some firms pay stock exchanges millions for these special data feeds. high speed trading has exploded in recent years and now accounts for nearly half of stock trading today. >> practice which consists of financial brokers and trading firms using advanced computer algorithms and ultra high speed data networks to execute traits has rightly received scrutiny from regulators. >> the charge that the stock market is rigged by all of this comes from author michael lewis who once worked on wall street in his new book "flash boys." he does not claim it's illegal. in fact, he and many others say it's perfectly legal, but he argues it gives some firms an unfair edge over average investors. >> what it feels like is insider trading because except instead of hearing that company x is going to acquire company y, you actually get advanced word of the price movements and the stock and can react to them before everyone else. >> the securities and exchange commission adopted rules nearly a decade ago that gave rise to high-speed trading. it hoped it would help lower the cost of investing for everyone and make markets more liquid, which the agency and supporters say it has, but the sec is revisiting the regulations now to see if they should be tightened up. >> the state department's inspector general is telling folks to clean up their financial act. a management alert issued late last month sights incomplete or nonexistent records for contracts worth $6 billion over the past few years. departments responsible for such things said they'll institute the ig's recommendations on how to fix the problems. free speech, political donations versus political correctness. a software ceo pays for his politics with 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company based on that donation, and therefore, he was asked to resign. >> they were -- believed in free speech. apparently, that doesn't include anyone who disagrees with the particular form of liberal orthodoxy they think is politically correct. again, you know, i think this is shocking that this would happen, and it really shows a bad trend in american culture and politics. >> only ten days on the job, but the ceo of mozilla, a software company, resigned, writing on his blog he couldn't be an effective leader. brendan ike gave a donation in 2008, there you see him, a donation six years ago of $1,000 in support of california's proposition 8 to ban gay marriage. here's the statement put out by the company. mozilla prides itself on being held to a different standard. and this past week, we didn't live up to it. we know why people are hurt and hangry. they are right, because we haven't stayed true to ourselves. we didn't act like you would expect mozilla to act. we didn't move fast enough to engage with people once the controversy started. we're sorry. we must do better. blogger andrew silver, who is gay, wrote this. if this is the gay rights movement today, hounding our opponents with a fanaticism more like the religious right than anyone else, count me out. if we're about intimidating the free speech of others, we're no better than the anti-gay bullies who came before us. what about this? let's bring in our panel tonight. syndicated columnist george will who also is the author of the new book "a nice little place on the north side, wrigley field at 100." kirsten powers, usa today columnist, and charles krauthammer. it feels lonely without the full screen of your book up there, but it's still available, i should point out. >> at book stores everywhere. >> george, you're in the spotlight here. let's talk about this, though. the ceo, what about this case and the implications of it? >> in addition to be evidence, redundant evidence that progressives for diversity in every but thought, it's an illustration of a new phenomenon. no one likes sore losers, but now we have sore winners. the gay rights movement is winning, with a speed and breadth that takes your breath awa. in oklahoma and utah and elsewhere. yet unsatisfied with victory, they want to stamp out and punish people for their previous views. this is relevant to an issue that is live in this town, that is campaign finance reform. people who want to reform our finances and increase government control over speeches and spending say, well, everyone can be in favor of full disclosure of campaign contributions. this case is an example of why some of us who used to be for full disclosure no longer are. the people advakting say we just want voters to make an informed choice. that's not what they're doing. they want to enable themselves to mount punitive campaigns and tear people and chill political speech. >> kirsten, it's important to point out this president, president obama, was an opponent of gay marriage in his presidency. take a listen to this. we asked the white house about it today. >> i believe that marriage is between a man and a woman. and i'm not in favor of gay marriage. but when you start playing around with constitutions, just to prohibit somebody who cares about another person, it just seems to me that that's not what america is about. >> does the white house think there should at least be tolerance on the issue even though the president has evolved on the issue and now supports same-sex marriage, there should be tolerance on the issue and other views heard? >> i certainly understand why an issue like this has been in the news and why a lot of people are talking about it, but i'm not in a position to weigh in on decisions made by private companies like this. >> they weren't weighing in. >> i'm not a fan of prop 8 and i support gay rights, but i think this has gone too far. this person should be judged on how they do their job, not on what their personal views are. in fact, he didn't even express his personal views. it's not like he was walking around the office lecturing people. he did something in private. i'm not quite sure how people know about it. where does this end? are we going to start now, suddenly people are going to want their ceo fired because they gave to something they didn't like or they're pro-abortion rights, and they have pro-life employees? i think it's a little out of control. in terms of the sore winners, i have to say, i'm not defending this, but you have to remember what these people are reacting to. the gay rights people are reacting to people who are trying to marginalize them from society, who really fought it tooth and nail, and they lost, but not that long ago, had they not lost, they did not want them to be allowed to be in society openly living. they wanted them marginalized. is it ironic -- >> there wasn't a marriage title to it. >> they don't want to accept the behavior. if you talk to people who even today oppose gay marriage, they say we don't want it to be an accepted thing in society. that's why we oppose it. we don't want society to put a stamp of approval on something we think isn't -- >> but many people were for civil unions but against gay marriage, just like the president. >> some but not all. >> one of the sound bites you said earlier, someone saying this is a kind of intolerance entering into the culture. i think it's narrower than this. this is the churl of the left not being satisfied with making an argument or even prevailing in an argument, but in destroying personally and marginalizing people who oppose it, in the same way that proponents of climate change declare the issue closed. it's over. there's no debate. it's settled. therefore, anybody who is skeptical of that is considered anti-science and is called a denier, a conscious way to echo that there's some kind of moral or intellectual equivalent of a denier of the holocaust, in the same way people are now declaring the national debate we have had for a decade or two on gay marriage is closed, and anybody who opposes gay marriage is a bigot and should be written out of polite society, ostracized and lose their jobs. and i think andrew sullivan, who not only is a gay activist but is an intellectual father of gay marriage, he wrote a book proposing it 15 years ago or so when it was considered weird, and he's argued for the normalization of gay life. that's been his cause. he calls it disgusting. he's absolutely right. this is totalitarian. discourse, and it shows a level of intolerance, it should be unacceptable, and people ought to be -- ought to get what they're giving out and feel a counter boycott. >> george, what about the people who argue this was a business decision? and this was mozilla saying we operate in a world where that's just not acceptable? >> the company had said that, you could say they have the morals of the marketplace, but at morals. what they said is people have been hurt by this. now, who was hurt and what was in the nature of the injury? that they learned that someone six years ago made a political contribution expressing thereby a political belief? this is how we get speech codes on campuses. people say we came to cams and we don't want our feelings hurt. we don't want to feel threatened by different views. as i said, the company could go into full grovel all it wants, but it should at least say we're trying to make a buck. >> kirsten, what about george's point about transparency on the political donations? if they in turn are used six years later as a weapon against someone, that's pretty interesting? >> yeah, but this shouldn't be happening. people should be able to have political views and we should be able to work together and live in the same society. it's a very narcicisstic impulse to have to have everybody agree with everything that you think in order for you to be able to work for them. especially because there's no evidence this guy was treating gay employees badly or it was somehow affecting the work environment. >> and one last point. if this had been the other way around and the company was a very conservative company and they were doing a similar thing, expunging some kind of liberal view, what do you think would happen? >> it would be leading the evening news for the next nine weeks. it wouldn't be heard about only in certain areas of the political spectrum. it would be a scandal of the highest proportion. and that's why it needs to be emphasized. it's a totalitarian impulse on the left. >> next up, the friday lightning round. marge: you know, there's a more enjoyable way to get your fiber. try phillips fiber good gummies. they're delicious, and a good source of fiber to help support regularity. wife: mmmm husband: these are good! marge: the tasty side of fiber. from phillips. thit's not the "limit yoursh hard earned cash back" card . it's not the "confused by rotating categories" card. it's the no-category-gaming, 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she waived her right when she declared her innocence. she is a government employee paid to do this job. she should be accountable for what happened there and answer the questions it seems like a no-brainer. for some reason this person is able to hide behind this claim that she has some fifth amendment protection that she waived. and i think shah she, you know, i would loo like to see the answers to the questions that they have for her. >> congress' ability to compel testimony is absolutely essential, not just with legislative functions but to equally important oversight function of the increasingly opaque and arrogant executive branch. and, therefore, they have to insist upon this right. this is also a lesson in why the american people are right to have divided government, because if the gastles weren't in the hands of republicans at least in the house, there would be no oversight of this administration whatever. >> all right. state of the economy. jobs numbers out. 192,000 jobs added last month. a little smaller than in february. a little under what was predicted. but, basically the same. the unemployment rate stays the same at 6.' 7%. thoughts about the economy, george? >> well, first, people should remember that we have to create 125,000 jobs a month just to keep up with the growth of the workforce. second, if the workforce participation rate today were what it was in december 2007, when the the recession began, the unemployment rate today would be 9.7%. we would be talking about how bad the recovery is. we wouldn't cale this a recovery. >> kirsten? >> the numbers are good. they are not fantastic. nothing to be especially excited about. they revised up the last two months, which was good news. i think it continues the sort of steady, slow climb, you know, of this recession. >> charles? >> steady, slow continuation of the weakest recovery since the second world war. the good news is half a million added into the workforce. the bad news is about a quarter of a million who now work part time who would like to work full time. the that rate called the u 6 which is the total unemployment actually increased. so, what it is consistent with the weak anemic 2. a% growth a year. which is, again, the worst recovery since the second world war. >> we'll be back with the panel's winners and losers have a quick break. why relocating manufacturingpany to upstate new york? i tell people it's for the climate. the conditions in new york state are great for business. new york is ranked #2 in the nation for new private sector job creation. and now it's even better because they've introduced startup new york - dozens of tax-free zones where businesses pay no taxes for ten years. you'll get a warm welcome in the new new york. see if your business qualifies at startupny.com you are about to become very popular. because when you buy the new samsung galaxy s5 on verizon, you get a second samsung galaxy s5 for free. so, who ya gonna give it to? maybe your brother 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(agent) i understand. (dad) we've never sold a house before. (agent) i'll walk you guys through every step. (dad) so if we sell, do you think we can swing it? (agent) i have the numbers right here and based on the comps that i've found, the timing is perfect. ...there's a lot of buyers for a house like yours. (dad) that's good to know. (mom) i'm so excited. it's friday, time for winners and lose ires, okay, charles? >> big loser john kerry. this is the third time he has initiated negotiations on his own that have exploded in his face. two on syria, geneva and acrimony on disarray. chasing around the russian foreign minister in europe is a way to prevent the annexation of the crimea peninsula which didn't happen. collapse of the middle east negotiations. there is in where to go but to stop. who knows he might even continue. winner of the week, american liberty, first amendment supreme court ruling that continues us on the road of undoing 30 years of very bad laws curtailing speech by curtailing the ability of people to contribute to political ideas. political campaigns. and this is a good thing. >> kirsten? >> my losers are elitist politicians in both parties and the republican this week was david purdue who is running for the senate in georgia. a video came out showing him maligning one of his g.o.p. opponents as, quote: just a high school dropout sort of questioning how she could run for the senate. and then democratic jim moran complained that members of congress are underpaid, and they can't even live decently, apparently. and my winner is obamacare for passing the 7 million number or at least coming close to it. >> george? >> loser of the week is the state of michigan because it's losing two extraordinarily talented congressman mike rogers and dave camp who are retiring. winner of the week i concur can krauthammer justice got it right saying laws restricting the content political timing of speech regulating money in politics which is almost entirely used to disseminate political speech violate the first amendment which says congress shall make no law abridging freedom of speech. >> all right. give me the 15-second elevator speech on a nice little place on the north side. wrigley field at 100. >> well, wrigley field at 100 is 100 years of cubs futility. it's been 105 years since they won the world series there is a joke in baseball. what do the florida marlins and the cubs have in common? both have never won a world series in their new ball parks. >> so it's worth a read. and as baseball season starts and i'm sorry for the loss. >> yes. well, it does happen. we have another 160 -- we will be just fine. >> washington nationals. that's it for tonight. thanks for inviting us into your home. that's it for this "special report," fair, balanced and unafraid. greta goes "on the record" right now. make it a great weekend. >> well, now they want a pay raise from you. >> i think that the american people should know that the members of congress are under paid. a lot of members can't even afford to live decently when they are at their job in washington. >> yes, democratic congressman james more ran griping that his $174,000 salary is too low to live on and he needs a pay hike. for what, you ask? congress and president obama driving up the debt, failing to create jobs and congress at failing at oversight, is that what you get a bonus for a pay raise? representative trey gowdy joins us. good evening, sir. >> hey, how are you? >> very