think is obvious but would not say out loud, you said it knowing you would likely be punished for saying it, but you said it anyway. why did you do that? i believe in the truth. i believe people should have these conversations and say things that matter without fear of punishment. tucker: you are old-fashioned. why do you think i couldn t agree with you more, and i m grateful you have that attitude. why do you think it was important to say this, specifically? well, when we get down to it, women and girls all share a biological reality. we are all female. but if any man, if any male person, can called themself a woman, or legally identified as female, then predatory men will do so in order to gain access to women s single-sex spaces, and it puts every woman and girl at risk. tucker: from the beginning i don t weigh in oa this often because sexual
Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20190213:05:17:15
archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Detailed text transcripts for TV channel - FOXNEWS - 20190213:05:49:15
archive.org - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from archive.org Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
week s hearings. in that memo she says, it is he said, she said in the prosecutor would press charges. lisa boone as paul does closely. hey tucker. tell me about her conclusions. her conclusions, basically she goes through all of these various inconsistencies that we have seen in her story. the problem is, she has remained unquestioned by the media and the left and that is dangerous because if you are bringing life altering and life ruining accusations against someone, your stories should be questioned. one, every witness that she has named has denied it. you go back at the fact, she is different given the periods of. she comes to the conclusion that in the washington post article, it was the summer of 1982. she has different stories about how many people were there and her polygraph letter alone, she has two different versions. originally four people in that edges four boys and two girls. even if you give her the benefit
to go police t officers. tucker: last week, we traveled to el salvador to see the situation firsthand. what happens in that countryad has a direct effect to what happens here, where ms-13 has gained a foothold from california to new york. officials say that many of their career activities are supervised by leaders back in central america. that was confirmed to us by a former ms-13 assassin we interviewed, a man who claims to have murdered dozens of people for the gang. b he told us how easy it is for gang members to sneak into the u.s. based on weak border control. the homeboys of ms-13 get into the united states. they would wait at a certain point. they would bait people. they would bait people to bring them over, and they would come and pick them up, so they find him, and he stays there.ey tucker: later, we visited a detention center in el salvador