easy exchange to try to get my point across to you if you interrupt. bill: joining us now from washington the anchor of fox news sunday chris wallace. so, look, i don t want to have to interrupt sarah palin or barack obama or anybody. i asked sarah palin a direct question. then answer. you asked durbin a direct question. tell me about the democratic budget. how come you are not cutting anything out of it he wants to talk about the republican budget. i saw that three times you asked him. now, when we do this, inevitably we get email you are rude. you are a bar baron, you barbarian. you are a hon. how do you see it? in your case they are right, bill. in my case they are wrong. the problem, of course, is that the politicians and this is just a study progression have gotten better and better, more scripted, more talking points. and they view your question as simply departure to give an answer whether the answer is
that fact. you reported of all the 126 indictments, all of them have been muslim. do you think that bill: okay. here now to respond fox news anchor geraldo rivera. so, i guess we are going back in history now. does congressman green have a point? well, the only al greene i know is the soul singer: he has
can then rebuild the state s economic picture to the tune of 250,000 jobs. how do you create jobs by breaking the union? well, we re going to find out more in his state of the state message which will be next tuesday. what he is alluding to. i have talked with some of the folks there in madison, wisconsin. what he is alluding to is stripping away collective bargaining powers that constrain the ability of government to reduce the size of payrolls and, indeed, reduce wages. he is going to be saving the citizens of so he says. bill: about $3 billion over three or four years. how does that create jobs. it saves jobs because they won t have to raise taxes. that s the point of this. his ability to constrain the size of government. bill: he is saying okay, because i got these give backs and because i broke the union and they are not going to bother me for the next four years, then i don t have to raise taxes, i can maybe cut taxes on some small business owners and
jihad. 75%. i don t know where that statistic comes from. bill: that comes from frank gaffney s group. frank gaffney is a hard guy. bill: shouldn t that statistic be annualized and either debunked or given credibility if he can back it up? isn t that important? i believe that were a statistic like that accurate, i would have heard it from a source more reliably. bill: not in the press you wouldn t. frank gaffney. i have never seen him when he is not being extremely assertive and throwing around numbers. bill: i want to know if there is i want to know what s going on in the mosques, also. and i will bet you every penny i have that there is not a mosque in this country that s not being surveilled right now by federal authorities whom i trust far more than frank gaffney with all due respect to him. bill: but you do want to know. i want to know. of course i want to know.
bill: they have to buy stuff. there will be a lot of donated stuff, too. they will have to get expertise in there. the japanese economy is an insular, kroncke correct me if i am wrong economy. we have problems getting our stuff into japan and china. i m not seeing a big impacten 00 u.s. economy. i think that is probably correct. although some of our steel companies will benefit. there is apparently limited insurance company exposure to restoring and replacing that which is damaged. bill: have their own insurance. at that level. an insular economy isn t in this respect. it is a trading economy. they export to the world. and much of the world is dependent on japanese products. bill: all right. let s go to wisconsin. walker says the governor of wisconsin says, look, i had to break the union, and he did. let s be honest. he broke it. bill: because i had to get costs under control so that i