job. jesse: i don t know what the democratic party believes when it comes to border security, healthcare, taxes or defeating isis. i do know the democratic party thinks trump is racist. i find it funny that the writer in his apolicy said he should have expressed his view differently. you are trying to discredit a man who put hours and excessive time into significant tax reform. if you are going to focus on race, why don t you highlight he was the first black senator elected in the south since reconstruction. why don t you highlight he s an evangelical christian. but no it s always for insults. jesse: when you play the race card it s usually the last card you have left to play. ladies, merry christmas. that s not a dog whistle. merry christmas. up next, a ufo sighting.
but when you have this pattern, it raises this question. are some of these stories rushed to the web or to the paper? eric: is it fair to pick out a few? i just think sometimes because there s a mistake and the cnn retraction and apolicy and so forth there is a broad brush that says everybody makes mistakes all the time and the important thing is whether the mistakes are quickly corrected. but look at the standard to which we in the business hold the trump administration. president, one of his cabinet members, one of his top white house officials makes a mistake, we ll pound them for days. when the stories are of this importance, i think it is fair to have to say that the president is blowing it in key instances. eric: editorial process that
of the club only paid half of the dues they were supposed to pay. would you like that? would you be satisfied with that. judge jeanine: of course not. everybody those people have to pay their fair share. the question is to what extent can we force them to do that? i think the message was sent. the secretary-general in d.c. reaffirmed this need for equitable burden sharing. we want our allies to be as serious as we are, and i think that message was received in brussels. judge jeanine: you are referring the nato general secretary. he absolutely he greed. manchester this week. what did the brits miss? what happens now with the united states and our ally the u.k. the issue is a both apolicy
the issue is a both apolicy question and a tactical one. on the tactical side it s a question of manpower. when you have got hundreds or thousands of people who have come back to the war zones and you don t know what they are planning, you don t know what they are doing. you need to surveil them. it takes 20-30 people to physically surveil one suspect. you know that. so it s a tactical question of manpower. but there is a bigger issue. what do you do if your citizen goes to syria or libya? they are not going there to get a suntan. what happens when they come back home? what are you going to do with that person? interview them? if they don t say i m building a bomb, that s okay? this is the challenge for europe. they are so much closer to those war zones. decisions have to be made and it s like the executive order we had here. we are concerned with people coming from those war zones. that s why the president signed
the dues they were supposed to pay. would you like that? would you be satisfied with that. judge jeanine: of course not. everybody those people have to pay their fair share. the question is to what extent can we force them to do that? i think the message was sent. the secretary-general in d.c. reaffirmed this need for equitable burden sharing. we want our allies to be as serious as we are, and i think that message was received in brussels. judge jeanine: you are referring the nato general secretary. he absolutely he greed. manchester this week. what did the brits miss? what happens now with the united states and our ally the u.k. the issue is a both apolicy question and a tactical one.