Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Tucker Carlson Tonight 20200307 : c

Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Tucker Carlson Tonight 20200307



pandemic and it could kill millions and at the least reorder the global economy and change our politics. could the disease help determine the outcome of the presidential election eight months from now? of course it could. it will. the leaders can't stop that. like all matters of life, it's beyond the human power to a fact. but they can respond to a threat in a way that makes the country stronger. not weaker. how? here is how. the first accept is take the virus seriously and convince the public you are. in 1918, woo woodrow wilson downplayed the spanish influenza and refused to take obvious caution to slow the spread. he had a war in europe to fight and the generals couldn't distracted from the goal so the government continued to ship men to the overcrowded army camps across the country and pack them on ships to france. the virus spread exponentially. in the end, 53,000 american soldiers were killed in combat in the war. at least 675,000 americans died of the flu. could wilson have prevented that disaster? not entirely. but by early and decisive action he could have improved america's odds. what does effective action look like now? we ought to be screening people when they get off the planes from infected countries. that is not complicated. that is obvious. but at the same time that is hardly a solution. we should be honest about how much we can do to keep the coronavirus from coming here. a hundred years ago the spanish flu killed a significant percentage of the population in remote aleutian islands and that was before flights. global pandemic is inevitable. too much movement to keep the viruses isolated. we should acknowledge that. we can do our best to keep the foreign diseases out of the country but we ought to spend most of the time figuring out how to protect americans once disease gets here. there is still a lot we don't know about the chinese coronavirus. but two things seem clear. it's highly communicable and the elder and those with preexisting respiratory disease face the greatest threat from it. for most americans the biggest risks will come not from the virus itself but from the ancillary effects. people will panic. travel will be disrupted. markets will tumble. and most critically hospitals will be overwhelmed. we are at the limits of the healthcare system. conditions will be tough for many thousand of americans looking for beds to recover from the flu. in seattle, they already are. but things will be worse for anyone suffering from say panceatitis or burst appendix or other health emergencies. people like this may not get care at all. the systems won't be able to accommodate them. is this really the time to invite the rest of the world to join medicare for all? probably not. that idea was always stupid. now it's clearly dangerous. saving american medicine from collapse must be the leaders' top priority now. we need to expand emergency hospital bed capacity. we need to make certain we have life saving drugs and medical equipment. the basics. that is not as simple as it sounds or as it should be. well, the rest of us are arguing about transgendered bathroom and sexism china took control of the healthcare system. china dominates the world market in pharmaceutical ingredients and come bounds in every essential medicine for high blood pressure, cancer, alzheimer's disease and many more. they come from china. so the key component in the vital medical technology, c.t. scanners, x-ray machine and ultrasound. as of tonight, more than 95% of all the antibiotics in america are manufactured in communist china. 95%. our chief global rival has a total monopoly on the most important medicine in the world. that should worry you more than anything that candidates are currently talking about. imagine watching one of your children die from an infected cut. china has the power to make that happen. the chinese government is acutely aware of this power. last year a primary economist in china suggested cutting off supply of the antibiotics to the united states in leverage of the trade war. it should have been the biggest story in irk many. the news media all but ignored it. why? it implicated them and their political party in one of the greatest crimes of our time. nine years ago famously brilliant former president barack obama did predict a connection from china and the next pandemic but he got it backward and claimed that china would help us. >> i absolutely believe that china's peaceful rise is good for the world. it's good for america. to the extent we have a partner in addressing the issues like climate change or pandemic. >> tucker: our foremost genius. the people in charge have no idea what they are doing. to the extent they do, they are selling us out on purpose. we should have seen this coming. in recent weeks you have heard a lot about the disruption to the so-called supply chains. think about what that means. it means that thanks to the economic changes that made a small group of the business moguls incredibly rich, we no longer make the things we need to survive and prosper as a nation. people who hate us and who seek to displace us make those things. it's not just medicine and x-ray machines. it's computers, phones, robotics and the automotive component, machine tools and essential part for aircraft engine, et cetera. apart from the fossil fuels it's everything. now you may have noticed many of the leaders talk about shutting down the domestic energy sector. the last independent part of the american economy. this is sabotage. we are about to learn how undermined we've been. at some point the leaders should be held to account for this. for now we need to work as if the lives depended on it and fix the problem. global warming is not the existential threat we face. china controls us. to respond need a modern marshal plan, one designed to rebuild essential american manufacturing. we should start tomorrow. with medicine and technology to fight the coronavirus. and then with antibiotics. some will oppose the idea because it poses a threat to arrangements they currently benefit from. but a majority of americans will welcome it gladly. even in the congress. manufacturing lifts every congressional district. it shouldn't be hard to win bipartisan support. no doubt the sages on television will denounce any acknowledgement of china's threat as racism or intolerance. joe biden has already done that. ignore them. the chinese coronavirus really is chinese. it arose in that country for same reason american businesses sent so many of our jobs there. lax health and safety standards and endemic corruption. china did this to the world. we should not pretend otherwise. that is not xenophobia. it's true. a few year years from now when r last victim of the virus has recovered or been buried the chinese government could gro stronger and america weaker. china releases pandemic and overtakes the world as a result. that is too horrible outcome. we ought to do everything we can to make sure it doesn't happen. let's start accurately talk about what is happening. coronavirus is not fluke. it's byproduct. the diseases and the mass destruction they cause are the built in cost of connectedness. they always will be. the people that told us there is no downside to live in a borderless world were lying. make them eat their words. strip them of their power. never listen to them again. in fact, this is still the hardest thing for washington to accept, this pandemic vind kates trump's political thesis. on the big things trump was right. trade, immigration, and manufacturing, globalization. these are the issues that the ruling class ignores and has ignored for decades in favor of the silly calculated distractions like the gender warfare and race politics. things that defy us. trump ran on the issues that matter and he won because the public was lied to and he should remember that. the white house reaction coronavirus so far has been uneven and limp. it doesn't need to be. the blueprint for effective response, response to protect the country and improves is, is there on the 2016 acceptance speech at the republican convention in cleveland. americanism not global. globalism, hesaid. all we need to do believe in ourself and the country again. time to show the world that america is back. bigger, better, stronger than ever before. there it is. that the governing agenda in the age of the chinese coronavirus. abandon globalism. rebuild the country. make the things we need. strong america is independent america. there is no other way. we are joined by the author of the book "restoring the public." he joins us tonight. ned, thank you for coming on. coronavirus comes to the country and we discovery for the tools that we need to fight the virus controlled by the chief rival china. which wishes us harm. what lessons should we draw from that? >> shows again, it shows us how dangerously dependent we are on the barbaric communist regime. you mentioned that the 95% of the antibiotics come from china. the department of congress study showed it might be higher. and the 80% of the products use to, to make the drugs domestically come from china as well. even more troubling, tucker, most of the generic drugs that are used to keep the military healthy are also coming from china. i think one thing that trump can do and be decisive on this is bring manufacturing of the antibiotics and the drugs home. give tax break and incentive and look at how he can lower the regulatory state and how we do the drug manufacturing in the country. this is an opportunity. we have to take the moment. i hope he does that on that front. >> tucker: it's a pretty clear path forward. there will come a time that it is important to hold the people who did this accountable. name the names. make them explain why they did what they did. really undermine the country in the way that is threatening to the existence. but for now there is no path forward other than be self-sufficient. >> that is right. he should remind people that the naive approach that we will welcome china to the w.t.o. and a liberal democracy and we'll all live happily ever after in a nirvana is a dangerous idea. trump needs to call out the corporatists that sold us out and at the same time, one reason we offshore the production is the heavy administration. it drove off last pencillian production as the chinese invested more money in the production of the penicillin. we have been sold out by the corporatist and the administrative state and the regulations. trump can address both no, no forcefully. >> tucker: he has. i reread his speech in cleveland where he lays out the program to respond to the coronavirus now. almost four years later. he has written a blueprint for this. >> stay true to it. >> we hope he uses it. >> stay true to it. do not lose sight of it. >> tucker: amen. thank you. good to see you. >> thank you, tucker. >> tucker: public events are shutting down rather than risk infections. trace gallagher has the latest. >> today marks the significant coronavirus cancellation to date. the city of austin, texas, just pulled the plug on the year's 34th annual south by southwest. that is the music, film and the technology festival to draw people all over the globe. but the pressure was immense. more than 50,000 people signed an online petition. apple, twitter and facebook already pulled out. last year the festival drew 500,000 fans. but that pales in comparison to the 90 million students kept home from school worldwide. the united nations says 22 countries on three continents shut down schools because of the virus. only a handful of the u.s. schools closed by the number will rise. finally post mates and the insta cart are still delivering the goods but now they offer it dingdong ditch style. drop the item or the food and then get out. known as the noncontact delivery. grub hub, door dash and the uber eats are still swapping food hand to hand. tucker? >> tucker: there will be a lot of the available food on america's doorstep. it's great to see you. thank you. >> yep. >> tucker: this is a fox news to bring you. president made a surprise announcement. the acting chief of staff mick mulvaney is leaving and replaced by the congressman mark meadows. the president tweeted this. "i'm pleased to announce the congressman mark meadows will become the white house chief of staff. i have long known and worked with mark and the relationship is a good one. i want to thank mick mulvaney serving if administration so well. he will become the special envoy for northern ireland." we will continue to follow this. of course. elizabeth warren left the presidential race but she is still doing her best to destroy candidates she dislikes. there is one thing that elizabeth warren has a lot of, it's hate. we will tell you what she is doing. as the member of pink floyd roger waters road "dark side of the move" he is joining to us discuss a political issue he is interested in. that interview is just ahead. introducing a single sports destination, where you can find games, news and highlights. all in one place, right on your tv. the new xfinity sports zone. use your voice to search every stat and score. follow the teams you love. and get notifications when the game's about to start, with the xfinity sports zone, everybody wins. now that's simple, easy, awesome. say "xfinity sports zone" into your voice remote today. >> tucker: ideologically elizabeth warren is close to bernie sanders. they made similar promises on the campaign trail. so you would think that warren might endorse bernie sanders against biden but don't hold your breath. she hates him. last night, rachel maddow trashed the supporter. she didn't trash the ideas. nobody talks about ideas anymore. that is too deep and real and important. no! ideas have no place in identity pollics. wake up. warren trashed them as retro grade sexist. >> i think it's a real problem with the online bullying and organized nastiness. i'm not just talking about you said mean things. really ugly stuff that went on. we are responsible for the people who claim to be our supporters and do threatening, ugly things to others. >> particularly, it's a particular problem with sanders supporters? >> it is. it just is. a factual question. >> tucker: you claim to be strong enough to be president but you whine about bernie supporters on twitter? there is a reason she is not the front runner and there is a reason she dropped out. sanders should be grateful. do you really want an endorsement from the person that elizabeth warren has become? we are joined from a political reporter. and joins us on the end of the campaign. boy does she dislike sanders and everyone in his world. >> yeah, tucker. the most interesting thing about the clip is bernie sanders and the campaign want elizabeth warren's endorsement at this stage. this seems like a hint maybe she is going to wait until the presumptive nominee to endorse the candidate. the tone here is similar to what we saw in the january debate when she refused to shake bernie's hand after the debate. this is about the time when they were having a feud. many early democratic primary voters told me that moment really dissuaded them from voting for elizabeth warren. but is not something we see a lot from pundits. they are mourning the loss of elizabeth warren being the last female front runner the race. take a watch. >> you know "no country for old men" and it seems like a country for old men. no country for women presidential wand dates. >> now she dropped out of the race and there are two older white men to choose from. >> the glass ceiling is intact. that will be one of the major interpretations of her candidacy. >> the sexism and the milchigny that still exists that is difficult for pem running for president to over -- women running for president to overcome. >> you have a right of being tired of men running for president and a right to be tired of watching men take the oath of office. you have a right to shed a tear today. >> there is still one more female candidate in the race. >> tucker: is that real? they are so entitled and pampered and stupid and narcissistic. aren't the majority of the democratic primary voters female? i'll answer my question. yes! i know you are trying to inform the audience. i'll stop. i couldn't control myself. >> one of the things you would think that the democratic people mourning this and people in the media would point out this is a record year for women running for president. more democrats and women running for president than ever before. so instead of celebrating that, is this dampening the last two contenders in race a little bit? that is what i think of with all of the mourning of the elizabeth warren campaign. there is still one more female candidate left in the race. tulsi gabbard. the press has not been particularly kind to her. >> tucker: you think? she talked to assad who saved the christians; therefore, e is evil. the last host, why don't you resign your job and give it to a woman. men saying it's a sexist country. then retire and give it to a deserved female. you should take the job, emily. >> thank you. i'll send in my resume. great to see you. thank you. >> also in the interview warren admitted her final debate performances were a kamikaze attack to take out another candidate she personally loathed, michael bloomberg. >> senator, you outlasted michael bloomberg in this campaign. >> yeah. was he still in that race? >> he was but nobody could tell after you destroyed him on the debate stage that way. a lot of postmortems on the candidate credit you with tanking the candidate with how you took him apart in the debate. is that what you were trying to do? >> yes. >> do you take credit? >> sure. the point he is not going to be the democratic nominee. all of this means he couldn't launch the attack against trump. think of what we need to talk about. hiding the taxes, history with the women and embracing the policies. when you are in charge, helping bazillionaires. he wouldn't be able to launch the autocrat argument against him because michael bloomberg as mayor got the change in the law so he could hang on to power longer. >> tucker: we are joined by the author of "panic attack." and it's great to have you tonight. why did everyone get shallow? i thought we were going to have a debate about the tax rates. or foreign policy. instead it's about the sexism. not sexiness which is different. sexism. why can't we have the debate higher than the average freshman dorm debate? >> it's so hypocritical and thin skin. warren and the surgates complain how mean bernie people are online and then she eviscerates the debate, she destroys bloomberg. proud of it, and bragging about it. i thought she was at the most likable when she was tearing him apart. >> i agree. >> why is it fine if she does it but anyone else is harsh and critical, we can't have that. that is so tip critical. that is the hypocrisy of the feminism activism always saying sexism but then they hold people accountable or they are rude or pushy, that is fine. they get to do that. it's so hypocritical. am i crazy to think that? i don't think so. >> tucker: the party of harvey weinstein lecturing us about sexrism? are you kidding? >> i was going to say they won't let tulsi gabbard, changed the rules so she can't be in the next debate. is that sexism? perhaps, maybe. i don't know. >> tucker: yeah. it's distressing to see it but i will say if you are looking to hire someone to hate full time, to express rage without end, elizabeth warren is a bottomless well of venom. isn't she? >> she really did not center her campaign -- or at the beginning it was about holding the rich accountable and reforming our society, the rules. but it quickly became for her about identity politics and political correctness. about how a trans 9-year-old should pick the next secretary of education. and say she was pandering to te wokest of the woke. got the "new york times" endorsement. congrats. but it doesn't matter. >> tucker: she is their kind of person. in the end, the identity politics is about me. narcissism. let me talk about my identity. talk about america. but they can't. it's great to see you. >> pli measure. >> tucker: thank you. coronavirus isn't the first example of the china influence over american life poisoning the country potentially. hollywood has been freely empowering the communism government of china for years, kowtowing to them, groveling to them. that is ahead. interview with the pink floyd front man roger waters coming up. >> ♪ so you think you can tell ♪ want to brain better? unlike ordinary memory supplements-neuriva has clinically proven ingredients that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try neuriva for 30 days and see the difference. with our moving and storage solutions. pack what you want, we store it for as long as you want. then, we deliver it where you want, so whether you need to move or store your things, pods is here to help you with flexible moving and storage solutions. >> tucker: over on msnbc brian williams and mara gay got out the abicus and did the math on bloomberg campaign. here is how it went. >> when i read it tonight on social media it all became clear. bloomberg spent $500 million on ads. u.s. population 327 million. don't tell us if you are ahead of us on the math. he could have given each american $1 million and had lunch money left over. incredible way to put it. >> it's an incredible way to put. it's true and disturbing. >> tucker: before we get too self-righteous, a lot of us went to journalism in the first place because we were bad at math. so we won't solve your budget crisis on this or any other show. but even so, we have producers and they are supposed to be good at math. what happened to them? poor brian williams. ♪ >> tucker: for years, american industry has boosted and encouraged ourdy pen dense on china -- our dependence on china outcoursing manufacturing capacity. familiar story. but even those who are not dependent on the factory, and we have seen china and nba sur vile of all. but we are joined by the "trillion dollar dilemma facing hollywood and the nba." the author chris fenton. thank you for writing the book. tell us what the dilemma is. what dilemma does hollywood face dealing with china? >> it's an interesting one. if you look at the potential of the market for hollywood or any business, it's vast potential. if you look at just the movie business itself, in 2009 there were only 5,000 movie screens. you cut to today there are over 70,000. next year, almost no matter what, the market is going to be the largest in the world and it will come to be so for a long, long time. so the prize to get in that market is massive. if you extrapolate that to the other sort of businesses you can see why the american businesses do have a dilemma that is especially part of the wokeness that has occurred in the last six months which is jeez, we are compromising american values, principles, national security interest. potential i.p. in order to get the access to that the market. now that we are cognizant of it, now that we are self-aware of it, what do we do now? we don't want to just give it up. it's too big of a market to give up. the shareholders are pressuring us to make money. >> tucker: so i get all that. they are amoral greed heads motivated purely by money. why is it that they whip around and judge the own country and people for the failings constantly. people literally selling out the values and lecturing us about russia and every other conceivable issue. why? how can they do that? >> it's tough. honestly, i can tell you i have been complicit in it, too. that is part of why i wrote the book. when you are in the fog of war of doing cultural and commercial exchange, you lose track of the things that are important to you as an american. it was only after the darrell mori chief by the houston rockets' g.m. in october i went back to look at the stuff i mot wrote about it and the adventures and the journeys i had in regard to making movies between the two countries. i realized wow, i was just as guilty as everybody else. but the thing is that it's very difficult to brush away the fog. now that the fog is out in the open. light joe sy said, the brooklyn nets owner that this is a third rail issue kept undercover. it's out. we need to discuss it more and talk about it more and talk about it freely. because frankly, there is a huge opportunity in that market to make money. number one. but number two is there is no better way to spread soft power influence from the united states and from the west. >> tucker: right. >> than to get the culture to china. the chinese consumers love our entertainment, whether it's sports or whether it's movies or television content. they love the video games. so there is no better way to figure out how do we get the government in china to give the wind to our backs to allow us access to the consumers without selling the souls as americans? that is the big question. that is the challenge we all need to talk about. >> tucker: you have moral qualms and that raises you above a lot of your compatriots. thank you for coming on. roger waters been in music business a long time and founded pink floyd. up next, he joins us. we'll be right back. >> tucker: it's been a year now since julian assange taken from the ecuadorian impassesy in britain and now -- embassy in britain. now he is facing charges in this country. roger waters cofounded the group pink floyd and he has been fighting to prevention assange's extradition and he spoke with us to explain why. explain -- i know you have been following it closely, if you would, what the charges are about and why he is being charged for what sounds like things journalists do every day. >> i can only assume that he is being charged. it's a bit like hanging a magpie. he is a warning to other journalists who might not writetories but this is the publish -- write stories but this is a published story powers at be don't want to be published. so this is warning off other journalists in the future telling them don't do this or we might lock up in prison for 175 years even though nothing you have done is illegal. i mean -- >> tucker: so he is being -- yes. so i'm just wondering. the reaction to this is surprising to me. it's broken down along the political lines to some extent but not entirely. the "new york times" has a long history, usually considered noble history of publishing secret documents, famously the pentagon papers in the 1970s from vietnam. why haven't they come to julian assange's defense? >> the papers, you would have to ask the papers. i was wondering if you were going to ask why haven't the d.o.j. decided to prosecute the "new york times"? and the "manchester guardian" and the "washington post" who all published the same information that wikileaks did? why did they pick out julian assange as an example to hang in the hedge and not the other papers? it's an interesting -- >> tucker: that is a fascinating question. >> well, thank you. they are lot more fascinating -- >> tucker: but right there. just to be clear, those newspapers published the information that he is facing 170 years for disseminating? >> they absolutely did. "the guardian" newspaper, two of the journalists who publishepublished the same infon that julian did on wikileaks have exposed the names and brought people in danger because they didn't concentrate on their work and redact everything as julian did. julian never put anyone in any danger. and the c.i.a. owned up to this quite recently. so that story that was spread that he put lives in danger is nonsense. as are all the other smear stories that w were told about julian assange in the last six or serve years. he was right to go to the ecuadorian embassy for asylum and to not go to sweden. we have since learned that the swedes would have extradited him. and there is not a hope in hell that julian assange would get a fair trial in the eastern district of washington, d.c. i mean, because -- sorry, go on. >> tucker: no, i'm wondering how you got so informed on this and so involved in it. >> well, first of all, i was just starting a large tour when the collateral murder video came out. i included it in my tour. so i really should be -- if he is guilty, so am i. i should be standing in the dark with him. they wouldn't have to extradite me. i'm in new york city. but every single night of the world tour i did that went on for nearly three years that video of that -- you know, the young american airmen killing the unarmed people and those two reuters cameramen in the street. so that it was published in many, many other places. quite rightly. it has been of great value i think to all of us. i'm certain that you believe in the freedom of the press and freedom of speech. >> tucker: of course. >> you believe in the first -- well, i'm not sure that everybody walks in the corridors of the power does. because if they did, they would not be trying to extradite julian assange from london. with the kangaroo court. they have him locked up in a bulletproof glass cage in the highest security prison in the united kingdom. banged up for 23 hours a day in solitaire confinement. the onl -- solitary confinement. the only crime he is charged with and found guilty of is a minor bail infraction. it's a misdemeanor. it's not even what you guys call a felony. >> tucker: so let me, so that leads to my final question. in hanging a lot of people in people's minds are the sexual assault i think charges we read so much about. that assange was facing. >> there weren't any. >> tucker: what happened to those? >> there weren't any. they never happened. neither of the women involved accused him of rape ever. it was a concoction of the somewhere in between the swedish police and the swedish judiciary, this story was allowed to develop and to escape. it was blown not out of proportion. it was completely invented by the mainstream media for whatever the motivations might be. all the smearing stories about julian assange, about his cat and the personal habits is completely made up. neil smeter, the special repertoire for torture for the united nations that interviewed julian at some length and has released a really interesting report on all of that, actually i saw him doing an interview the other day where he said that he was reluctant to get involved at the beginning because he read all the stories. >> tucker: right, that is right. >> he looked into it and said it's all absolute nonsense. when he wrote his report, he tried to get it published in the "new york times" and the "washington post" and the "london times." and "the guardian" and, and, and and nobody would publish it. not a word of it. >> tucker: i'm not surprised. >> this is why it's so amazing -- it's not amazing. it's so great you have me on and that we are everyone able to air the subject. because there is -- it's like what in england we call a "d" notice. you can't talk about it. we have made up our mind -- >> tucker: i'm against things you can't talk about. i'm for talking about things. you are not getting rich from doing this so i appreciate it. roger waters, thank you. >> thank you very much. >> tucker: good to see you. chuck schumer threatened a couple of supreme court justices this week. why did he do that? because he is an abortion fanatic like the party he represents. we will tell you the depth of it after the break. this is big. double dozen big! it's captain d's new double dozen shrimp. yeah, you heard that right. two dozen golden, crispy shrimp piled high on one plate! time to double down when the captain is callin'. captain d's. with our moving and storage solutions. pack what you want, we store it for as long as you want. then, we deliver it where you want, so whether you need to move or store your things, pods is here to help you with flexible moving and storage solutions. - do that are degrading?ideo tapes, film reels, or photos, so whether you need to move or store your things, legacybox professionally converts them to dvds, thumb drive, or the cloud. legacybox is simple and safe, with over half a million satisfied customers. visit legacybox.com today, and get 40% off. >> tucker: chuck schumer's threats against the two most creptly installed supreme court justices got attention this week. they should have. but the narrow focus on what schumer said is obscured a great ongoing trend. he threatened the supreme court because the supreme court is hearing a challenge to a law in the state of louisiana. now that law requires the state abortion clinics to be overseen by a physician with ad mitting privileges at a local hospital. a real doctor. it's not a ban on abortion. it's a safety requirement. in the 1990s the democrats said they want abortion to be "safe, legal and rare" so you think they would welcome a law like that to make it safer. but no, the current democratic party are not pro-abortion. they are zealots. they could have set a standard of care for children born after the botched abortions and they could have that. modern democratic party every birth is a tragedy. it distracts mothers from the higher calling, serving investment banks. abortion in contrast is unmitigated good in their view. so good after schumer finished speaking a rally leader celebrated transgender people who stayed female enough to have abortions of their own. i'm not making it up. watch. >> hear it for senator schumer! let's hear it for people who have abortions? let's hear it for the trans who have abortions! >> tucker: at the same rally rashida tlaib said it would be racist if america doesn't continue the sacrifice of hundreds of thousands of black and hispanic babies. >> my, my, my are they obsessed with our bodies, how we talk, how we look, what we stand for. this issue is an economic justice issue. this economic is racial justice issue. [applause] yo, yo. you know what? you are so freaking obsessed with what i decide to do with my body, maybe you shouldn't even want to have sex with me. >> tucker: good luck getting that image out of your head. at the same rally, as stress ths phillips was sharing the good news of abortion. >> i will never stop talking about my abortion or my period. or my experiences in childbirth. my yeast infections or my ovulation that lines up with the moon. >> tucker: if abortion makes you happy, why is she acting like that? lila rose founded the pro life group pro action and joins us tonight to respond. thank you for coming tonight. >> thank you, tucker. >> tucker: are the so-called pro choice people becoming more extreme than they were? >> i think it's just coming to the surface. all that rage and all that anger that you are seeing. underneath that is a lot of hurt. there have been over 60 million abortions. >> tucker: exactly. >> since 1973. 60 million abortions. tens of millions of women, mothers and fathers who have lost children to abortion. they have to keep justifying it. what you can are seeing in this rally from the actress phillips and chuck schumer up there smugly calling out threats on the supreme court justices that want to defend human life and may defend human life taking out roe, you see a lot of this pain. ultimately it's woundedness. there are 2,363 abortions every day. this is a problem that continues. it leaves a lot of pain in the wake. >> tucker: that is -- that is why they are acting like that. >> yep. >> tucker: people who are happy with the things they did, don't talk like that, do they? >> right. actually, the actor phillips really, really sad. she gets up there and says that her career, her car, her hybrid car, her beautiful effing house, she says, were the reason she was glad when she had an abortion as a teenager. those are the reasons she was able to succeed because she had the abortion. it's the antithesis of women empowerment, that to have a nice car and nice house i have to kill my child. how did we get here as a country? >> tucker: we are lying to people. >> women deserve better. exactly. >> tucker: they certainly do. >> women, families fathers, we deserve better than this. this is a tragedy and injustice. >> tucker: we should be compassionate, as hard as it is. great to see you. thank you for the wise words. good to see you. we're out of time. back every monday at 8:00 and every weeknight. the show that is sworn enemy of lying, pomposity, smugness and group think. have the best weekend with the ones you love try. to put the bad stuff out of your mind. sean hannity takes over next. see you monday. ♪ >> sean: welcome to "hannity." a lot of news breaking friday night. two deranged angry lunatics fight it out in what is increasingly nasty battle for the democratic no nation. president trump fully focus odden the job, serious issues. earlier today he toured what is the devastation sadly to our friends in tennessee. multiple tornadoes ravaging the state on tuesday night. killing at least 25 people. including five children. on the ground. the president offered his full support. vowed to provide whatever federal assistance the state will need. and then he flew to atlanta. where he met with officials at the center for dis

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Transcripts For FOXNEWSW Tucker Carlson Tonight 20200307

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pandemic and it could kill millions and at the least reorder the global economy and change our politics. could the disease help determine the outcome of the presidential election eight months from now? of course it could. it will. the leaders can't stop that. like all matters of life, it's beyond the human power to a fact. but they can respond to a threat in a way that makes the country stronger. not weaker. how? here is how. the first accept is take the virus seriously and convince the public you are. in 1918, woo woodrow wilson downplayed the spanish influenza and refused to take obvious caution to slow the spread. he had a war in europe to fight and the generals couldn't distracted from the goal so the government continued to ship men to the overcrowded army camps across the country and pack them on ships to france. the virus spread exponentially. in the end, 53,000 american soldiers were killed in combat in the war. at least 675,000 americans died of the flu. could wilson have prevented that disaster? not entirely. but by early and decisive action he could have improved america's odds. what does effective action look like now? we ought to be screening people when they get off the planes from infected countries. that is not complicated. that is obvious. but at the same time that is hardly a solution. we should be honest about how much we can do to keep the coronavirus from coming here. a hundred years ago the spanish flu killed a significant percentage of the population in remote aleutian islands and that was before flights. global pandemic is inevitable. too much movement to keep the viruses isolated. we should acknowledge that. we can do our best to keep the foreign diseases out of the country but we ought to spend most of the time figuring out how to protect americans once disease gets here. there is still a lot we don't know about the chinese coronavirus. but two things seem clear. it's highly communicable and the elder and those with preexisting respiratory disease face the greatest threat from it. for most americans the biggest risks will come not from the virus itself but from the ancillary effects. people will panic. travel will be disrupted. markets will tumble. and most critically hospitals will be overwhelmed. we are at the limits of the healthcare system. conditions will be tough for many thousand of americans looking for beds to recover from the flu. in seattle, they already are. but things will be worse for anyone suffering from say panceatitis or burst appendix or other health emergencies. people like this may not get care at all. the systems won't be able to accommodate them. is this really the time to invite the rest of the world to join medicare for all? probably not. that idea was always stupid. now it's clearly dangerous. saving american medicine from collapse must be the leaders' top priority now. we need to expand emergency hospital bed capacity. we need to make certain we have life saving drugs and medical equipment. the basics. that is not as simple as it sounds or as it should be. well, the rest of us are arguing about transgendered bathroom and sexism china took control of the healthcare system. china dominates the world market in pharmaceutical ingredients and come bounds in every essential medicine for high blood pressure, cancer, alzheimer's disease and many more. they come from china. so the key component in the vital medical technology, c.t. scanners, x-ray machine and ultrasound. as of tonight, more than 95% of all the antibiotics in america are manufactured in communist china. 95%. our chief global rival has a total monopoly on the most important medicine in the world. that should worry you more than anything that candidates are currently talking about. imagine watching one of your children die from an infected cut. china has the power to make that happen. the chinese government is acutely aware of this power. last year a primary economist in china suggested cutting off supply of the antibiotics to the united states in leverage of the trade war. it should have been the biggest story in irk many. the news media all but ignored it. why? it implicated them and their political party in one of the greatest crimes of our time. nine years ago famously brilliant former president barack obama did predict a connection from china and the next pandemic but he got it backward and claimed that china would help us. >> i absolutely believe that china's peaceful rise is good for the world. it's good for america. to the extent we have a partner in addressing the issues like climate change or pandemic. >> tucker: our foremost genius. the people in charge have no idea what they are doing. to the extent they do, they are selling us out on purpose. we should have seen this coming. in recent weeks you have heard a lot about the disruption to the so-called supply chains. think about what that means. it means that thanks to the economic changes that made a small group of the business moguls incredibly rich, we no longer make the things we need to survive and prosper as a nation. people who hate us and who seek to displace us make those things. it's not just medicine and x-ray machines. it's computers, phones, robotics and the automotive component, machine tools and essential part for aircraft engine, et cetera. apart from the fossil fuels it's everything. now you may have noticed many of the leaders talk about shutting down the domestic energy sector. the last independent part of the american economy. this is sabotage. we are about to learn how undermined we've been. at some point the leaders should be held to account for this. for now we need to work as if the lives depended on it and fix the problem. global warming is not the existential threat we face. china controls us. to respond need a modern marshal plan, one designed to rebuild essential american manufacturing. we should start tomorrow. with medicine and technology to fight the coronavirus. and then with antibiotics. some will oppose the idea because it poses a threat to arrangements they currently benefit from. but a majority of americans will welcome it gladly. even in the congress. manufacturing lifts every congressional district. it shouldn't be hard to win bipartisan support. no doubt the sages on television will denounce any acknowledgement of china's threat as racism or intolerance. joe biden has already done that. ignore them. the chinese coronavirus really is chinese. it arose in that country for same reason american businesses sent so many of our jobs there. lax health and safety standards and endemic corruption. china did this to the world. we should not pretend otherwise. that is not xenophobia. it's true. a few year years from now when r last victim of the virus has recovered or been buried the chinese government could gro stronger and america weaker. china releases pandemic and overtakes the world as a result. that is too horrible outcome. we ought to do everything we can to make sure it doesn't happen. let's start accurately talk about what is happening. coronavirus is not fluke. it's byproduct. the diseases and the mass destruction they cause are the built in cost of connectedness. they always will be. the people that told us there is no downside to live in a borderless world were lying. make them eat their words. strip them of their power. never listen to them again. in fact, this is still the hardest thing for washington to accept, this pandemic vind kates trump's political thesis. on the big things trump was right. trade, immigration, and manufacturing, globalization. these are the issues that the ruling class ignores and has ignored for decades in favor of the silly calculated distractions like the gender warfare and race politics. things that defy us. trump ran on the issues that matter and he won because the public was lied to and he should remember that. the white house reaction coronavirus so far has been uneven and limp. it doesn't need to be. the blueprint for effective response, response to protect the country and improves is, is there on the 2016 acceptance speech at the republican convention in cleveland. americanism not global. globalism, hesaid. all we need to do believe in ourself and the country again. time to show the world that america is back. bigger, better, stronger than ever before. there it is. that the governing agenda in the age of the chinese coronavirus. abandon globalism. rebuild the country. make the things we need. strong america is independent america. there is no other way. we are joined by the author of the book "restoring the public." he joins us tonight. ned, thank you for coming on. coronavirus comes to the country and we discovery for the tools that we need to fight the virus controlled by the chief rival china. which wishes us harm. what lessons should we draw from that? >> shows again, it shows us how dangerously dependent we are on the barbaric communist regime. you mentioned that the 95% of the antibiotics come from china. the department of congress study showed it might be higher. and the 80% of the products use to, to make the drugs domestically come from china as well. even more troubling, tucker, most of the generic drugs that are used to keep the military healthy are also coming from china. i think one thing that trump can do and be decisive on this is bring manufacturing of the antibiotics and the drugs home. give tax break and incentive and look at how he can lower the regulatory state and how we do the drug manufacturing in the country. this is an opportunity. we have to take the moment. i hope he does that on that front. >> tucker: it's a pretty clear path forward. there will come a time that it is important to hold the people who did this accountable. name the names. make them explain why they did what they did. really undermine the country in the way that is threatening to the existence. but for now there is no path forward other than be self-sufficient. >> that is right. he should remind people that the naive approach that we will welcome china to the w.t.o. and a liberal democracy and we'll all live happily ever after in a nirvana is a dangerous idea. trump needs to call out the corporatists that sold us out and at the same time, one reason we offshore the production is the heavy administration. it drove off last pencillian production as the chinese invested more money in the production of the penicillin. we have been sold out by the corporatist and the administrative state and the regulations. trump can address both no, no forcefully. >> tucker: he has. i reread his speech in cleveland where he lays out the program to respond to the coronavirus now. almost four years later. he has written a blueprint for this. >> stay true to it. >> we hope he uses it. >> stay true to it. do not lose sight of it. >> tucker: amen. thank you. good to see you. >> thank you, tucker. >> tucker: public events are shutting down rather than risk infections. trace gallagher has the latest. >> today marks the significant coronavirus cancellation to date. the city of austin, texas, just pulled the plug on the year's 34th annual south by southwest. that is the music, film and the technology festival to draw people all over the globe. but the pressure was immense. more than 50,000 people signed an online petition. apple, twitter and facebook already pulled out. last year the festival drew 500,000 fans. but that pales in comparison to the 90 million students kept home from school worldwide. the united nations says 22 countries on three continents shut down schools because of the virus. only a handful of the u.s. schools closed by the number will rise. finally post mates and the insta cart are still delivering the goods but now they offer it dingdong ditch style. drop the item or the food and then get out. known as the noncontact delivery. grub hub, door dash and the uber eats are still swapping food hand to hand. tucker? >> tucker: there will be a lot of the available food on america's doorstep. it's great to see you. thank you. >> yep. >> tucker: this is a fox news to bring you. president made a surprise announcement. the acting chief of staff mick mulvaney is leaving and replaced by the congressman mark meadows. the president tweeted this. "i'm pleased to announce the congressman mark meadows will become the white house chief of staff. i have long known and worked with mark and the relationship is a good one. i want to thank mick mulvaney serving if administration so well. he will become the special envoy for northern ireland." we will continue to follow this. of course. elizabeth warren left the presidential race but she is still doing her best to destroy candidates she dislikes. there is one thing that elizabeth warren has a lot of, it's hate. we will tell you what she is doing. as the member of pink floyd roger waters road "dark side of the move" he is joining to us discuss a political issue he is interested in. that interview is just ahead. introducing a single sports destination, where you can find games, news and highlights. all in one place, right on your tv. the new xfinity sports zone. use your voice to search every stat and score. follow the teams you love. and get notifications when the game's about to start, with the xfinity sports zone, everybody wins. now that's simple, easy, awesome. say "xfinity sports zone" into your voice remote today. >> tucker: ideologically elizabeth warren is close to bernie sanders. they made similar promises on the campaign trail. so you would think that warren might endorse bernie sanders against biden but don't hold your breath. she hates him. last night, rachel maddow trashed the supporter. she didn't trash the ideas. nobody talks about ideas anymore. that is too deep and real and important. no! ideas have no place in identity pollics. wake up. warren trashed them as retro grade sexist. >> i think it's a real problem with the online bullying and organized nastiness. i'm not just talking about you said mean things. really ugly stuff that went on. we are responsible for the people who claim to be our supporters and do threatening, ugly things to others. >> particularly, it's a particular problem with sanders supporters? >> it is. it just is. a factual question. >> tucker: you claim to be strong enough to be president but you whine about bernie supporters on twitter? there is a reason she is not the front runner and there is a reason she dropped out. sanders should be grateful. do you really want an endorsement from the person that elizabeth warren has become? we are joined from a political reporter. and joins us on the end of the campaign. boy does she dislike sanders and everyone in his world. >> yeah, tucker. the most interesting thing about the clip is bernie sanders and the campaign want elizabeth warren's endorsement at this stage. this seems like a hint maybe she is going to wait until the presumptive nominee to endorse the candidate. the tone here is similar to what we saw in the january debate when she refused to shake bernie's hand after the debate. this is about the time when they were having a feud. many early democratic primary voters told me that moment really dissuaded them from voting for elizabeth warren. but is not something we see a lot from pundits. they are mourning the loss of elizabeth warren being the last female front runner the race. take a watch. >> you know "no country for old men" and it seems like a country for old men. no country for women presidential wand dates. >> now she dropped out of the race and there are two older white men to choose from. >> the glass ceiling is intact. that will be one of the major interpretations of her candidacy. >> the sexism and the milchigny that still exists that is difficult for pem running for president to over -- women running for president to overcome. >> you have a right of being tired of men running for president and a right to be tired of watching men take the oath of office. you have a right to shed a tear today. >> there is still one more female candidate in the race. >> tucker: is that real? they are so entitled and pampered and stupid and narcissistic. aren't the majority of the democratic primary voters female? i'll answer my question. yes! i know you are trying to inform the audience. i'll stop. i couldn't control myself. >> one of the things you would think that the democratic people mourning this and people in the media would point out this is a record year for women running for president. more democrats and women running for president than ever before. so instead of celebrating that, is this dampening the last two contenders in race a little bit? that is what i think of with all of the mourning of the elizabeth warren campaign. there is still one more female candidate left in the race. tulsi gabbard. the press has not been particularly kind to her. >> tucker: you think? she talked to assad who saved the christians; therefore, e is evil. the last host, why don't you resign your job and give it to a woman. men saying it's a sexist country. then retire and give it to a deserved female. you should take the job, emily. >> thank you. i'll send in my resume. great to see you. thank you. >> also in the interview warren admitted her final debate performances were a kamikaze attack to take out another candidate she personally loathed, michael bloomberg. >> senator, you outlasted michael bloomberg in this campaign. >> yeah. was he still in that race? >> he was but nobody could tell after you destroyed him on the debate stage that way. a lot of postmortems on the candidate credit you with tanking the candidate with how you took him apart in the debate. is that what you were trying to do? >> yes. >> do you take credit? >> sure. the point he is not going to be the democratic nominee. all of this means he couldn't launch the attack against trump. think of what we need to talk about. hiding the taxes, history with the women and embracing the policies. when you are in charge, helping bazillionaires. he wouldn't be able to launch the autocrat argument against him because michael bloomberg as mayor got the change in the law so he could hang on to power longer. >> tucker: we are joined by the author of "panic attack." and it's great to have you tonight. why did everyone get shallow? i thought we were going to have a debate about the tax rates. or foreign policy. instead it's about the sexism. not sexiness which is different. sexism. why can't we have the debate higher than the average freshman dorm debate? >> it's so hypocritical and thin skin. warren and the surgates complain how mean bernie people are online and then she eviscerates the debate, she destroys bloomberg. proud of it, and bragging about it. i thought she was at the most likable when she was tearing him apart. >> i agree. >> why is it fine if she does it but anyone else is harsh and critical, we can't have that. that is so tip critical. that is the hypocrisy of the feminism activism always saying sexism but then they hold people accountable or they are rude or pushy, that is fine. they get to do that. it's so hypocritical. am i crazy to think that? i don't think so. >> tucker: the party of harvey weinstein lecturing us about sexrism? are you kidding? >> i was going to say they won't let tulsi gabbard, changed the rules so she can't be in the next debate. is that sexism? perhaps, maybe. i don't know. >> tucker: yeah. it's distressing to see it but i will say if you are looking to hire someone to hate full time, to express rage without end, elizabeth warren is a bottomless well of venom. isn't she? >> she really did not center her campaign -- or at the beginning it was about holding the rich accountable and reforming our society, the rules. but it quickly became for her about identity politics and political correctness. about how a trans 9-year-old should pick the next secretary of education. and say she was pandering to te wokest of the woke. got the "new york times" endorsement. congrats. but it doesn't matter. >> tucker: she is their kind of person. in the end, the identity politics is about me. narcissism. let me talk about my identity. talk about america. but they can't. it's great to see you. >> pli measure. >> tucker: thank you. coronavirus isn't the first example of the china influence over american life poisoning the country potentially. hollywood has been freely empowering the communism government of china for years, kowtowing to them, groveling to them. that is ahead. interview with the pink floyd front man roger waters coming up. >> ♪ so you think you can tell ♪ want to brain better? unlike ordinary memory supplements-neuriva has clinically proven ingredients that fuel 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration. try neuriva for 30 days and see the difference. with our moving and storage solutions. pack what you want, we store it for as long as you want. then, we deliver it where you want, so whether you need to move or store your things, pods is here to help you with flexible moving and storage solutions. >> tucker: over on msnbc brian williams and mara gay got out the abicus and did the math on bloomberg campaign. here is how it went. >> when i read it tonight on social media it all became clear. bloomberg spent $500 million on ads. u.s. population 327 million. don't tell us if you are ahead of us on the math. he could have given each american $1 million and had lunch money left over. incredible way to put it. >> it's an incredible way to put. it's true and disturbing. >> tucker: before we get too self-righteous, a lot of us went to journalism in the first place because we were bad at math. so we won't solve your budget crisis on this or any other show. but even so, we have producers and they are supposed to be good at math. what happened to them? poor brian williams. ♪ >> tucker: for years, american industry has boosted and encouraged ourdy pen dense on china -- our dependence on china outcoursing manufacturing capacity. familiar story. but even those who are not dependent on the factory, and we have seen china and nba sur vile of all. but we are joined by the "trillion dollar dilemma facing hollywood and the nba." the author chris fenton. thank you for writing the book. tell us what the dilemma is. what dilemma does hollywood face dealing with china? >> it's an interesting one. if you look at the potential of the market for hollywood or any business, it's vast potential. if you look at just the movie business itself, in 2009 there were only 5,000 movie screens. you cut to today there are over 70,000. next year, almost no matter what, the market is going to be the largest in the world and it will come to be so for a long, long time. so the prize to get in that market is massive. if you extrapolate that to the other sort of businesses you can see why the american businesses do have a dilemma that is especially part of the wokeness that has occurred in the last six months which is jeez, we are compromising american values, principles, national security interest. potential i.p. in order to get the access to that the market. now that we are cognizant of it, now that we are self-aware of it, what do we do now? we don't want to just give it up. it's too big of a market to give up. the shareholders are pressuring us to make money. >> tucker: so i get all that. they are amoral greed heads motivated purely by money. why is it that they whip around and judge the own country and people for the failings constantly. people literally selling out the values and lecturing us about russia and every other conceivable issue. why? how can they do that? >> it's tough. honestly, i can tell you i have been complicit in it, too. that is part of why i wrote the book. when you are in the fog of war of doing cultural and commercial exchange, you lose track of the things that are important to you as an american. it was only after the darrell mori chief by the houston rockets' g.m. in october i went back to look at the stuff i mot wrote about it and the adventures and the journeys i had in regard to making movies between the two countries. i realized wow, i was just as guilty as everybody else. but the thing is that it's very difficult to brush away the fog. now that the fog is out in the open. light joe sy said, the brooklyn nets owner that this is a third rail issue kept undercover. it's out. we need to discuss it more and talk about it more and talk about it freely. because frankly, there is a huge opportunity in that market to make money. number one. but number two is there is no better way to spread soft power influence from the united states and from the west. >> tucker: right. >> than to get the culture to china. the chinese consumers love our entertainment, whether it's sports or whether it's movies or television content. they love the video games. so there is no better way to figure out how do we get the government in china to give the wind to our backs to allow us access to the consumers without selling the souls as americans? that is the big question. that is the challenge we all need to talk about. >> tucker: you have moral qualms and that raises you above a lot of your compatriots. thank you for coming on. roger waters been in music business a long time and founded pink floyd. up next, he joins us. we'll be right back. >> tucker: it's been a year now since julian assange taken from the ecuadorian impassesy in britain and now -- embassy in britain. now he is facing charges in this country. roger waters cofounded the group pink floyd and he has been fighting to prevention assange's extradition and he spoke with us to explain why. explain -- i know you have been following it closely, if you would, what the charges are about and why he is being charged for what sounds like things journalists do every day. >> i can only assume that he is being charged. it's a bit like hanging a magpie. he is a warning to other journalists who might not writetories but this is the publish -- write stories but this is a published story powers at be don't want to be published. so this is warning off other journalists in the future telling them don't do this or we might lock up in prison for 175 years even though nothing you have done is illegal. i mean -- >> tucker: so he is being -- yes. so i'm just wondering. the reaction to this is surprising to me. it's broken down along the political lines to some extent but not entirely. the "new york times" has a long history, usually considered noble history of publishing secret documents, famously the pentagon papers in the 1970s from vietnam. why haven't they come to julian assange's defense? >> the papers, you would have to ask the papers. i was wondering if you were going to ask why haven't the d.o.j. decided to prosecute the "new york times"? and the "manchester guardian" and the "washington post" who all published the same information that wikileaks did? why did they pick out julian assange as an example to hang in the hedge and not the other papers? it's an interesting -- >> tucker: that is a fascinating question. >> well, thank you. they are lot more fascinating -- >> tucker: but right there. just to be clear, those newspapers published the information that he is facing 170 years for disseminating? >> they absolutely did. "the guardian" newspaper, two of the journalists who publishepublished the same infon that julian did on wikileaks have exposed the names and brought people in danger because they didn't concentrate on their work and redact everything as julian did. julian never put anyone in any danger. and the c.i.a. owned up to this quite recently. so that story that was spread that he put lives in danger is nonsense. as are all the other smear stories that w were told about julian assange in the last six or serve years. he was right to go to the ecuadorian embassy for asylum and to not go to sweden. we have since learned that the swedes would have extradited him. and there is not a hope in hell that julian assange would get a fair trial in the eastern district of washington, d.c. i mean, because -- sorry, go on. >> tucker: no, i'm wondering how you got so informed on this and so involved in it. >> well, first of all, i was just starting a large tour when the collateral murder video came out. i included it in my tour. so i really should be -- if he is guilty, so am i. i should be standing in the dark with him. they wouldn't have to extradite me. i'm in new york city. but every single night of the world tour i did that went on for nearly three years that video of that -- you know, the young american airmen killing the unarmed people and those two reuters cameramen in the street. so that it was published in many, many other places. quite rightly. it has been of great value i think to all of us. i'm certain that you believe in the freedom of the press and freedom of speech. >> tucker: of course. >> you believe in the first -- well, i'm not sure that everybody walks in the corridors of the power does. because if they did, they would not be trying to extradite julian assange from london. with the kangaroo court. they have him locked up in a bulletproof glass cage in the highest security prison in the united kingdom. banged up for 23 hours a day in solitaire confinement. the onl -- solitary confinement. the only crime he is charged with and found guilty of is a minor bail infraction. it's a misdemeanor. it's not even what you guys call a felony. >> tucker: so let me, so that leads to my final question. in hanging a lot of people in people's minds are the sexual assault i think charges we read so much about. that assange was facing. >> there weren't any. >> tucker: what happened to those? >> there weren't any. they never happened. neither of the women involved accused him of rape ever. it was a concoction of the somewhere in between the swedish police and the swedish judiciary, this story was allowed to develop and to escape. it was blown not out of proportion. it was completely invented by the mainstream media for whatever the motivations might be. all the smearing stories about julian assange, about his cat and the personal habits is completely made up. neil smeter, the special repertoire for torture for the united nations that interviewed julian at some length and has released a really interesting report on all of that, actually i saw him doing an interview the other day where he said that he was reluctant to get involved at the beginning because he read all the stories. >> tucker: right, that is right. >> he looked into it and said it's all absolute nonsense. when he wrote his report, he tried to get it published in the "new york times" and the "washington post" and the "london times." and "the guardian" and, and, and and nobody would publish it. not a word of it. >> tucker: i'm not surprised. >> this is why it's so amazing -- it's not amazing. it's so great you have me on and that we are everyone able to air the subject. because there is -- it's like what in england we call a "d" notice. you can't talk about it. we have made up our mind -- >> tucker: i'm against things you can't talk about. i'm for talking about things. you are not getting rich from doing this so i appreciate it. roger waters, thank you. >> thank you very much. >> tucker: good to see you. chuck schumer threatened a couple of supreme court justices this week. why did he do that? because he is an abortion fanatic like the party he represents. we will tell you the depth of it after the break. this is big. double dozen big! it's captain d's new double dozen shrimp. yeah, you heard that right. two dozen golden, crispy shrimp piled high on one plate! time to double down when the captain is callin'. captain d's. with our moving and storage solutions. pack what you want, we store it for as long as you want. then, we deliver it where you want, so whether you need to move or store your things, pods is here to help you with flexible moving and storage solutions. - do that are degrading?ideo tapes, film reels, or photos, so whether you need to move or store your things, legacybox professionally converts them to dvds, thumb drive, or the cloud. legacybox is simple and safe, with over half a million satisfied customers. visit legacybox.com today, and get 40% off. >> tucker: chuck schumer's threats against the two most creptly installed supreme court justices got attention this week. they should have. but the narrow focus on what schumer said is obscured a great ongoing trend. he threatened the supreme court because the supreme court is hearing a challenge to a law in the state of louisiana. now that law requires the state abortion clinics to be overseen by a physician with ad mitting privileges at a local hospital. a real doctor. it's not a ban on abortion. it's a safety requirement. in the 1990s the democrats said they want abortion to be "safe, legal and rare" so you think they would welcome a law like that to make it safer. but no, the current democratic party are not pro-abortion. they are zealots. they could have set a standard of care for children born after the botched abortions and they could have that. modern democratic party every birth is a tragedy. it distracts mothers from the higher calling, serving investment banks. abortion in contrast is unmitigated good in their view. so good after schumer finished speaking a rally leader celebrated transgender people who stayed female enough to have abortions of their own. i'm not making it up. watch. >> hear it for senator schumer! let's hear it for people who have abortions? let's hear it for the trans who have abortions! >> tucker: at the same rally rashida tlaib said it would be racist if america doesn't continue the sacrifice of hundreds of thousands of black and hispanic babies. >> my, my, my are they obsessed with our bodies, how we talk, how we look, what we stand for. this issue is an economic justice issue. this economic is racial justice issue. [applause] yo, yo. you know what? you are so freaking obsessed with what i decide to do with my body, maybe you shouldn't even want to have sex with me. >> tucker: good luck getting that image out of your head. at the same rally, as stress ths phillips was sharing the good news of abortion. >> i will never stop talking about my abortion or my period. or my experiences in childbirth. my yeast infections or my ovulation that lines up with the moon. >> tucker: if abortion makes you happy, why is she acting like that? lila rose founded the pro life group pro action and joins us tonight to respond. thank you for coming tonight. >> thank you, tucker. >> tucker: are the so-called pro choice people becoming more extreme than they were? >> i think it's just coming to the surface. all that rage and all that anger that you are seeing. underneath that is a lot of hurt. there have been over 60 million abortions. >> tucker: exactly. >> since 1973. 60 million abortions. tens of millions of women, mothers and fathers who have lost children to abortion. they have to keep justifying it. what you can are seeing in this rally from the actress phillips and chuck schumer up there smugly calling out threats on the supreme court justices that want to defend human life and may defend human life taking out roe, you see a lot of this pain. ultimately it's woundedness. there are 2,363 abortions every day. this is a problem that continues. it leaves a lot of pain in the wake. >> tucker: that is -- that is why they are acting like that. >> yep. >> tucker: people who are happy with the things they did, don't talk like that, do they? >> right. actually, the actor phillips really, really sad. she gets up there and says that her career, her car, her hybrid car, her beautiful effing house, she says, were the reason she was glad when she had an abortion as a teenager. those are the reasons she was able to succeed because she had the abortion. it's the antithesis of women empowerment, that to have a nice car and nice house i have to kill my child. how did we get here as a country? >> tucker: we are lying to people. >> women deserve better. exactly. >> tucker: they certainly do. >> women, families fathers, we deserve better than this. this is a tragedy and injustice. >> tucker: we should be compassionate, as hard as it is. great to see you. thank you for the wise words. good to see you. we're out of time. back every monday at 8:00 and every weeknight. the show that is sworn enemy of lying, pomposity, smugness and group think. have the best weekend with the ones you love try. to put the bad stuff out of your mind. sean hannity takes over next. see you monday. ♪ >> sean: welcome to "hannity." a lot of news breaking friday night. two deranged angry lunatics fight it out in what is increasingly nasty battle for the democratic no nation. president trump fully focus odden the job, serious issues. earlier today he toured what is the devastation sadly to our friends in tennessee. multiple tornadoes ravaging the state on tuesday night. killing at least 25 people. including five children. on the ground. the president offered his full support. vowed to provide whatever federal assistance the state will need. and then he flew to atlanta. where he met with officials at the center for dis

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