ERIC BOLLING (CO-HOST): Well he's different, I guess he's alluding that he's the first African-American president. Is that what you're saying? So critics are attacking him for that? That's pretty divisive, is it not?
JUAN WILLIAMS (CO-HOST): Well, being attacked? You're being called uppity and a liar and all that?
KIMBERLY GUILFOYLE (CO-HOST): What does that have to do with skin color?
[...]
BOLLING: When he lies about certain things, when Hillary Clinton lies, and you call them out, it has nothing to do with skin tone.
WILLIAMS: I, look, I -- he's a Muslim, he's different, he's not born in this country. How about all that? I mean it seems to me there's a lot of vitriol directed at this president.
GUILFOYLE: Who's saying that?
WILLIAMS: Who said that?
GUILFOYLE: Who's saying that he's a Muslim? He's not born --
WILLIAMS: Oh my gosh. There was a whole what they call a birther movement, I think.
GUILFOYLE: Okay well nobody is saying that here. So you're saying he can't be criticized with respect to his failure on foreign policy or anything with national security.
WILLIAMS: Of course he can.
GUILFOYLE: Oh come on. You know what? That's a grow up. That's a grow up. Like he just lost his man card on that.
BOLLING: He didn't have it. He lost it six years ago.