tv Kennedy FOX Business December 3, 2018 9:00pm-10:00pm EST
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much. that does it tonight for trish regan prime time. we're going to be back here tomorrow night. we've got a big show in store. good night everyone. from the financial capital of the world, "kennedy" begins right now. ♪ kennedy: the nation remembers former president george h.w. bush tonight lying in state at the u.s. capital as thousands 0 mourners begin to pay their respects. here we have a lye look inside the capital rotunda where the flag draped coffin of our 41st president will remain until his funeral rale on wednesday. half an hour ago president trump and melania visited capitol hill and in a statement he said, quote, president george h.w. bush led a life that exemplified what is truly great about america. so many of his generation, the
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greatest generation, president bushed worked throughout his life to bring about a world of justice and lasting peace. with his passing we mark one of the last pages of the ca definig american history. >> throughout his life of service president bush personified grace. his character was second to none. he reached the heights of power with uncommon humility. we pray it will be a source of comfort for all of those who mourn the loss of this good man and great american. kennedy: as you know president bush died on friday at the age of 94. he was a navy pilot, a
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congressman, a u.n. ambassador, envoy to china, cia chief, vice president and finally president. last night on "60 minutes" his eldest son and fellow president george bush spoke about the time his father visited in the white house on his very first day in office. watch. >> oh, man. he was like -- you know, my favorite story about all of that is i had just gotten sworn in and andy carr said why continue you go down to the oval and see what it feels like as president. and i said, okay. so i went down, sitting down there. and just kind of taking it all in. and in walks dad. andy had told dad i was down there. he walks in, i said mr. president, welcome. and he said, thank you, mr. president. that's all that was said for a while. it was profound moment for me. kennedy: on thursday president bush will be interred in texas alongside his wife barbara. he died earlier this year after 73 years of marriage.
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joining me now, cohost of "the five" on the fox news channel dana perino is here. what is the one thing about president bush 41 that struck you the most with your time with him. >> you've heard so many people talk about his personal touch. i would say he was very witty and he had a way with words. he would send you a note and it would always be kind of clever. but he wowlz do thing would do e a joke that might be slightly inappropriate. and barbara bush, i remember at one point, she said george, you can't say that. and he looked at me and winked and said, i but it's true. i got to know him as a staffer. i never considered myself a family member. but i loved observing their family. they made you feel like you were a part of their scene. and the thing i learned from 43 the most about it -- i don't
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have children, but the unconditional love of a parent, the most important thing. and that's such an interesting element about their relationship that people are now taking a look at. because this is a father/son relationship and they are incredibly close. and when george w. bush becomes president, how much did he rely on his dad because i always got the sense that george h.w. bush held back. kennedy: definitely. >> and didn't want to be too oppressive although he was arguably the most qualified person who ever held the office. kennedy: i think what he did mostly was be a father. it was i love you. if you need us, call. but he didn't knit pick any decisions. and it was of the things, if 43 asked him for advice he was ready to give it. but he was never one to call up saying you need to do this or you ought to do that. that was respectful and i think that's hard for people when you have boundaries and children. you want to make decisions for them, help them, you want to do
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what you think is best for them. but 43 talks about how when he was a younger guy, he sowed his wild cats, going to be an oil man, baseball business and decided 0 to go into politics. he told me each time i knew if i failed it was okay because i knew mom and dad were going to love me. i had a hard time watching 43 during the ceremony when the casket is brought in. i'm close to him. i'm a big crier. he and i together are a big mess. we're part of the ballers brigade. christopher buckley, a speech writer for 41. he said while 41 may have been born as a new englander, he has the tear ducts of a sicilian grandmother. i can see 43 is holding it together but i can see his anguish. he was a president, amazing. also his dad. and 43 writes decision points, the first line of the book says
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i am the first born son of george h.w. and barbara bush. and that's how he decides to define the rest of his life. kennedy: that's incredible. >> someone pointe.someone pointr see another father/son presidential again. we almost saw a husband and wife. >> and also 43 is the first to bury his father who was a president because john adams and john quincy adams, they couldn't get word back in time and he had to be buried before his son could get there. kennedy: historical trivia for you. >> that's the thing. we're standing in a moment of historical significance but because it really is the passing of a generation. it's always sad when someone passes because their history
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goes with them. and george h.w. bush didn't write his own memoir like others did. but when it comes to world war ii and the greatest generation, they're nearly all gone and i think that's what we feel. and the gratitude they did for our country and we have a responsibility to carry forward and do our best. kennedy: you shared with me a letter that 41 had written to his daughter and son-in-law as they were about to have a child. and the thing that he wrote, so knowingliant lovingly about family and those moments when a baby opens its eyes for the first time and, you know, the beautiful struggle and all of those lines, and even the letter that he wrote to bill clinton when he walked into the oval office for the first time, he really revealed so much of himself in those letters. are you surprised that he didn't write a full memoir? >> also, a friend of mine who
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was cia undercover said he was kind of being a jerk at his universal class and didn't want to go to the things. eating lunch alone. one day he sees a shadow and he looks up and it's the direct of the cia, may i sit down with you. sure. my friend said, trying to introduce himself and said, i know, i know who you are. and he said i want you to try to get in touch with your colleagues. get to know them. this is a family business. they had this great lunch. the guy turned his life around, decides he's going to make a commitment to the cia and just retired last year. kennedy: and that person's name was leon panetta. >> that person's name he asked me to keep it anonymous. kennedy: that's fine. so what do you take away as a staff member of one of the bush white houses, of how both of these men treated their staff? >> well, i think that's probably the most important part in terms of leaders. so now generation x, now we're like heading into the point,
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where are the leaders. kennedy: yes, i know. >> you have to help. you have to reach down and help. you have to make them a part of it. be a really good listener and make it look like you care. it's not that hard. and a little note here and there, even if it's an e-mail, it makes a big difference i'm grateful that i had a chance to know them. i told my husband, without the bushes, there could be no me. i wouldn't be here. they gave me a lot of opportunity and i try not to take it for granted. kennedy: thank you so much for sharing your insight. i know that every show has wanted a piece of your perspective which is so incredibly rare given what this family has plishedz a accomplis. a. and the fact that that your good friend george w. bush and his siblings have had to bury two parents months apart. thank you so much. as you pointed out, our hearts are not heavy. >> great life. kennedy: you look back at an
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incredible legacy. >> america has a lot to be proud of. kennedy: excellent. thank you. >> thank you for having me. kennedy: very good. and you can stay right here, fox business network all week for the continuing memorial coverage and the funeral of president george h.w. bush. let's move on to the russia investigation. a conservative writer filed a 78-page criminal complaint against bob mueller accusing him of engage in a coup against president trump. moments ago he spoke to tucker carlson about this complaint. watch. >> forgotten about two e-mails. when i finally loaded the time machine, i realized these e-mail were there. the special prosecutor allowed me to amend the testimony ten days later. and in the one count they wanted to plead guilty to, they wanted to charge me with knowingly and
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willfully of giving false information not taking into account they had allowed me, the special prosecutor, to amend the testimony, which i thought was completely fraudulent. kennedy: president trump's lawyer rudy ghoulianty telling special counsel is put up or shut up, describing his tactics as un-american. president trump rounded things out with a tweet this morning that reads, quote, bob mueller was a much different man than people think and his out of control band of angry democrats don't want to truth. they only want lie ps truth is very bad for their mission. so why is the president and why are his allies going on offense. here to weigh in, former speech writer for george w. bush, bill mcgurn. welcome back as we learn with mcgurn. >> thank you. kennedy: these are certainly interesting times and some people writing in conservative media have said just this weekend maybe there's more to this than we thought. there has been a full throated defense of the president and
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some of his allies. but it's looking like mueller's noose is tightening around the necks of jerome corecy and roger stone. what do you make of the developments. >> if all that we know is true, the worst is true, i still don't think it rises to the level of a crime. i'm old-fashioned. i like prosecutors to investigate crimes which is what a special counsel is supposed to do. this special counsel was set up for a counter intelligence investigation into russian meddling into the 2016 election. and to what extent if any the trump organization, trump officials were involved. and we're mostly getting process crimes, you know, lying to the fbi. you know, it's easy to dismiss jerome corecy. but i believe that the fbi interviewed general flynn, thought he was telling the truth and yet he pled guilty. so i think it's very troubling and i think this is -- it's
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inherent in the nature of special counsel. it's an extra constitutional kind of institution with very little accountability. kennedy: and it's very easy to abuse that enormous power. >> go on and on and on. i think the mueller investigation is like obamacare. we have to have it wrapped up before we find out what's in it. and it would be interesting if in the end none of the things he charges people with are related to the actual thing he's investigating but just to the investigation. kennedy: that's the thing about the corecy and stone relationship and what they knew about wikileaks. how problematic is that and does it matter if jerome corecy and roger stone knew about the trove from wikileaks or somehow delivered it to them. >> i think it's not a crime. it may be unseemly, which politics often is. kennedy: it's only a crime if they lied about iment. >> i think it's a crime if they lied about it.
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kennedy: in front of the investigators denied everything. but they of got documents. >> even if they lied about it's not the underlying crime of what he was supposed to investigate. basically russian officials cooperating with trump officials to affect the 2016 campaign fraudulently. i think even if we have this dirt and we know it's coming out, i'm not sure there's a crime there. kennedy: do you believe that corecy had no contact with julian assange? >> i don't know. he may have had contact. what i want to know is was there a crime. did he conspire to hack into things. did he help on that. and i think we're getting further away from what the original investigation was supposed to be. kennedy: i agree with you that it doesn't appear to be impeachable for what we know right now. but it seems as though there has been a slight turn in that mueller has been heavy handed and he has been really pressing
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in on those he finds to be most vulnerable and those who have the most information and the most to lose. so at some point it's like getting a full body scan. >> still should be a crime. if you're the special prosecutor investigating, we started out with an investigation, not a crime to be investigated. and if the only crimes are the process crimes, these guys fell into a perjury trap, i think that's damaging if are the country. kennedy: we'll see. because you can't have special counsel for every instance and every issue. >> exactly. my belief is special counsels corrupt independent counsels salute islycounselsabsolutely. kennedy: coming up, violent riots and protests all over france. wait until you hear why. a full report after the break. president trump says he's one step closer to cutting a giant trade deal with china.
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how long will that peace last and how will we benefit. the panel joins me to discuss next. so a tree falls on your brand-new car and totals it. and as if that wasn't bad enough, now your insurance won't replace it outright because of depreciation. if your insurance won't replace your car, what good is it? you'd be better off just taking your money and throwing it right into the harbor. i'm regret that. with new car replacement, if your brand-new car gets totaled, liberty mutual will pay the entire value plus depreciation. liberty mutual insurance. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ back pain can't win. now introducing aleve back and muscle pain. only aleve targets tough pain for up to 12 hours with just one pill. aleve back & muscle.
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emanuel macron's new green tax on fuel, yeah, what started as a protest on saturday quickly turned into a riot. it was led by a group called the yellow vests who continued to block road access to fuel depots around the city. fowe have more of what in the world of sports is going 0 on there. >> this started mid november via social media. french citizens connects to protest these planned fuel tax increases. french president macron wants to curb carbon emissions. they proposed a tax of what would equal 30-cents more per gallon. rises fuel prices were seen as a final straw. in paris of course and other big cities just like here, public transport works well, people don't have to own cars or drive them as much.
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this idea of the fuel tax is seen as hurting the working classes. now a quote from a national paper said something to effect of macron want to talk about ecology. i want to afford my wife. this is because people in faller towns are feeling. macron is seen as an elitist. so far macron says he's not going to meet with the protesters. he's said he has heard the deep anger. he's offered adaptations to the taxes. the prime minister is meeting with protesters, is expected to address lawmakers on wednesday. from a political standpoint, macron is pretty centrist. he campaigned on being probusiness. but the leftist voice in france is so much stronger than it is in the u.s. the right too. both extreme groups thought to be time-out on the streets and
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basically many crown is getting squeezed from both sides. it didn't look as if the situation was cool on various social media platforms, protesters have called for demonstrations every saturday until there's an satisfactory outcome. back in the day there used to be somebody that the government could negotiate with. this is decentralized and being fueledly citizen anger. kennedy: even if they wanted to meet with the head of the protest groups, there is so such thing. they're decentralize and angry. and i'm reading that the french elector ratelectorate is behind. >> i think as the violence continues that may become less true. and there are a lot of polls that say do you think another leader could handle this better. more than 50% say no. kennedy: interesting. >> unhappy but not sure what to do about it.
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kennedy: macron will stay for another day. thank you. president trump is predicting a big leap forward in remtions with china following saturday's meeting with president xi jinping i. this morning he took it to twitter writing, quote, my meeting was an extraordinary one. relations withchina have taken a leap forward. very good things with happen. we're dealing from great strength. but china has much to gain if and when a deal is exreeted. completed. nothing has been finalized yet. can the president put the trade war behind him and who stands to benefit the most if he gives peace a chance. let me go to tonight's panel. a senior fellow, maddie deposit her is here along with campus reform editor in chief, lawrence
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jones and independent wem's forum fellow, nan hayworth. let's dive into this. the markets really like this. >> for now. kennedy: yes. a positive upswing. we had a few days of delirium and depression with the marketings. what is it about this conversation that sets them up and is it sustainable. >> we've seen the last few months some fretion because of the feds and the trade war. the fact being january 1 we had a significant deadline closing in, chinese tariffs that were 10% were going to kei rocket to 25% we've learned that no longer will happen but we don't know much else. this is the best possible outcome of the weekend. beginning of the week president trump was talking about yeah, of course the tariffs are going to go up. not only that, the rest of the goods importing from china that don't have tariffs on them, we're going to stick some on
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them too. i'm certainly happy to see we're backing away from that. but the question is what do we do in the next 90 day to effectuate change. there will continue to be pressure on the market when we get closer to the deadline. we've delayed it for now. kennedy: this is the teaser rate. this is when you find that, oh, man, i can go to the gym for 5 bucks a month or it's going to go up to 35 if i don't sign up now. >> exactly. that's the big question. kennedy: the tariffs are at 10%, they could go to 2025% after 90 days. china is talking about limiting tariffs entirely on automotive exports from the u.s. >> maybe. there's no confirmation from china on that. kennedy: that would benefit manufacturing here but also some of the farm tariffs being 86ed and u.s. farmers being able to have greater access. >> that's part of the problem. larry kudlow was asked about this and what he said is they
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have an understanding. whawhen he was pressed, he said with, well, there's no agreement. it reeve leaves us here to spece on what's to come. do we want to get hit now or later. that's the big question. kennedy: there will be consumers in both countries who will like not having to pay as much for the stuff that they want. how much is this a credit to the president's toughness? >> well, you know, the president is taking on issues that have been not effectively dealt with for years and then decades, including the very significant issue which everybody agrees on, chinese technology theft. so he has decided to use a mechanism that many of us who are free market folks dislike. >> but that's setting him up. kennedy: steve mnuchin has addressed that but we haven't heard enough about the ip theft.
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>> but that indeed has entered the conversation as well. lighlighthizer has been named. he's a hard liner and has been pro-tariff. tariffs will be accepted if the president gets success. what has he done that has been really great for us in terms of negotiating position. deregulate, cut our taxes and grow our economy. kennedy: we have much more with the panel as always. tonight it is a great one. coming up, did president trump just say we're spending touch otoo much on defense after pushing for more funding for the military? i'll explain in my monologue next. than psoriatic arthritis. as you and your rheumatologist consider treatments,
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president of russia will talking about a arms race. the u.s. spent $716 billion this year, crazy. $716 billion a year isn't just crazy, it's bat crap crazy. but the president is known to be of two minds when it comes to this issue as evidenced by some earlier statements on dod funding. watch this. >> as soon as i take office i will ask congress to fully eliminate the defense sequester and will submit a new budget to rebuild our military. it is so deploated. we will rebuild our military. >> i am sending congress a budget that rebuilds the military, eliminates the defense sequester and calls for one of the largest increases in national defense spending in american history. national defense authorization act is the most significant
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investment in our military and our war fighters in modern history. kennedy: that's how we got to $716 billion. about that, now when i say the president is of two minds, i think one of them is a regulation slashing unorthodox visionary breathing new life into moldy sales. the other mind is the love/hate child of amanda bynes and heather loo lock locklear. in else explains it. take for example ohm ra so, when she left the white house, the president tweeted, thank you ohm ra so for you service. i wish you continued success. and then the president had a
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change of heart when he started saying unsavory things about him. when you give a crazed low life a break and give her a job at the white house, i guess it didn't work out. good work by general kelly for quickly firing that dog. but what about more serious people. here's president trump on kim jong-un at the first address to the u.n. in 2017 rocket man is on a suicide mission for himself and for his regime kennedy: that was the evil twin. then after meeting little rocket man in singapore this summer, the president called him a quote talentetalented negotiator. and this year he praised kim for his courage. is one man capable of such extraordinary temp mental swings? i'm not psychiatrist and i'm certainly not a crime novelist but we clearly have a rogue doppelganger trying to soil our
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extraordinary l. if the evil twin can be banished to gitmo so the nice genius president can steady the helpment, we'll see perhaps entitlement we form to go i a long with the reclassification of cannabis and the termination of the federal reserve. oar we'll just try to keep up with the president who is clearly busy fighting himself and that's the memo. kennedy: the deficit did hit a high this year. but is the president right to want to first cut military spending? the panel is back, maddie, lawrence and nan. nan, i will start with you because the president has made no bones about the fact that he wanted to increase military spending, which was stable for
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several years. >> and i was in congress when we did the sequester. kennedy: and now he looks back at the bill and goes, this is crazy. it's like when i take my entire staff out and we have crab legs and steaks and then i get the bill and i'm like who the hell wanted to come here. >> and yet it was you. the president is -- as he is in many things, he visits many sides that can be equally valid. in fact he was right that our military did need beefing up in various ways, including the way in which we pay our troops. what happened was the senate allowed the filibuster to remain. senate democrats insisted on increased domestic spending to go along with the increase in military spending. and that resulted in, yes, a much bigger budget than the
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president actually wanted to sign into law. kennedy: but it's not just. >> this is a frustration for myself as a conservative and a dualism that other republicans have expressed not just donald trump. which is that we should cut spending and spending a dollar here doesn't when you have the consequence you meant here. and then all of the sudden when it comes to security spending for republicans, every dollar spent makes us more safe and we know that's not true. kennedy: that's like saying every dollar you spend on education makes kids smarter. >> it's the amount of money that the military wastes. there's so much surplus. >> we don't even know. the fact that the pentagon has never had to with stand an audit. they finally just went under our first audit and what did it say? >> the military is near and dear to the president's heart. but once he started adding up the digits, he decided as a
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businessman, this isn't smart. so it's a deal between heart and mentally what he needs to do as a businessman. >> remember when he talked about boeing that's creating the new air force one needed to do more with less. >> he renegotiated the deal himself. >> you can't spend a dollar better if you don't know where it's going to begin with. that's why transparency is so important and why the republicans shouldn't. >> it doesn't make you unpay try yotic and it doesn't mean you don't support the military. if you have these redundancies and aspects of expenditures that are pointless within you're going a disservice to the men and women. >> come back to congress and ask for more. >> i can tell you that military contractors have lots of friendships among members of congress. >> that's why they keep building tanks like it's. >> even the local police
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department. >> sources of jobs and that's a big challenge. kennedy: the three of you are glorious and amazing and i thank you all. >> i like this panel. >> me too. >> thank you too. kennedy: we're going to write this one down and revisit it. >> i'll come back. kennedy: an american is one of three astronauts docked on the international space station today. one of many exciting new developments in space exploration over the past week, including a successful mission to mars. i'm going to talk about all that fun with former nasa astronaut terry burkes next. he bumblebee?" he bumblebee?" ♪
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robot on mars and said that the u.s. is heading back to the moon so much sooner than you think. a russian spacecraft carrying three astronauts successfully docked with the international space station today and the good stuff arrives tomorrow. spacex is sending its own vehicle the dragon to the iss. packed with more than 20 20 20 0 experiments. here to break it down, terry. some of the stuff on the spacex rocket is so exciting. what is it about that microgravity environment that could help us come up with a cure for cancer, help high schoolers develop a better dental glue. please, tell me everything. >> well the big thing is, like you said, it's a weightlessness. on earth you just can't get rid of gravity. you can get rid of it for a few second but beyond that if you
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drop your experiment, it's going to hit the ground. in space you can turn the gravity off, not exactly but has' what it feels like, do medical research. when i was there we did 250 experiments. kennedy: you spent a lot of time only n the payings station. >> i did. kennedy: what was your favorite research? >> we did 250 experiments during my seventh months there. there was a few human related on medicine and bone and muscle drugs and also immunizations for e. coli and salma the sal salmo. those were exciting. kennedy: did they develop a mainstream for that? i'veed a e. coli twice and it's awful. by the way early at the top of the show, that was not data per reno coughing. it was bill mcgurn. >> it's not like isaac newton
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discovers gravity. it's one piece of the puzzle that the big drug company or the national institutes of health, whoever is do the experiments. we're trying to make one piece in a long chain that can only be solved in the abaccepts of weight. kennedy: sometimes that's hard to describe to people and it's interesting to see these pictures back from mars and see the stories of a lander docking on a comet. but you have something responsible for 90% of pancreatic duck tall carcinoma and one third of small cell lung cancer and half of corectal tumors. now you're literally talking about a cure for cancer that devastates millions and mill mis of families. >> many of us know someone affected by that and this is a great example.
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the lab in space, the organization that runs it partners with the fred rick national lab in maryland to get the cancer gene. they do protein crystal growth, a way to make the actual chemical of the gene grow really big and really pure, which makes it easier to study so then a scientist can figure out factually the chemical formation of this gene to make drugs to hopefully combat it more effectively. kennedy: would it be immune no therapies? what sort of drug would follow those from discoveries? just curious? >> i'll let the fred rick lab answer those questions. but it's the promise of, again, the protein crystal growth technique that we do on several types of proteins, you can understand the formation of it better to make better drugs. kennedy: we're getting closer and closer. and the fact that space can get us there, something that is so
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remote and so far away, theoretical to most people might actually bring relief and extend lives. it's really profound stuff. how soon do you think it will be before a human being lands on mars? >> you know, i think it's question of political science than the rocket science to get the mars. it seems like ever sense the apollo program, he said we were 20 years from mars and we've been 20 years from mars ever since then. hopefully there's a renewed interest on space. and i think with the right program that we stick to it and don't change it. kennedy: amen, terry burkes. >> you know where we're at right now is i think the end of the beginning. the beginning of space exploration was government. kennedy: that is so heavy. i feel like i'm seeing laser flied for the first time. we're up against a hard break. please come back. many more discoveries to discuss.
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they're paying the players, it comes out to be 6 million bucks. that's quite a racket. and this is the topical storm. topic number one, bewe begin at a florida car dealership that has an opening in their parts department. this guy used a fire extinguisher to break through a wall because he wanted to rob the place and then as he was climbing in, he lost his shorts. it's 'em bar razzing but at least he didn't lose his shirt like the other exphers at the dealership. in he other state this might be the craziest video of the year. in florida it's lucky to crack the top 20 behind the beer drinking squirrel and the dog driving a car. the perpetrator has not been caught but the internet is calling this the dumbest thing in the world. if you google the dumb etion thing in the world, every story is about alexandria cortez. topic number two, nobody has a
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crazier weekend than a philadelphia deli worker who ran into an old flame on friday. uh-oh. police say this woman ordered a cashier to give her free beer but when she said no, she decided to have some fireball instead. the thirsty thief made a blowtorch out of her hair spray and as of tonight she's still on the run. but nobody has been able to catch her. nobody has been able to catch anything in philly this football season. these got to hurt. fly eagles. topic number three, no fugitives were caught in the state of washington this weekend but police caught a wingman. this red tailed hawk broke a window and flew around a house because apparently he misunderstood what they meant by airbnb. fortunately there were no children in the resident because the customers are empty nes
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teres. stop the puns before somebody flips me the bird. wildlife officials say it was a miracle that no bun was injured by the red tailed hawk. they're used to eaght wood rats. topic number four, a woman's next door neighbor crashed her party on saturday night. the female driver accidentally backed it up while she was trying to accelerate and plowed right through her neighbor's beu drawer. the complex has reopened although sales have hit a wall. there was a joke in there about women drivers. but not going to make it because i'm not a jerk like the men on my staff. what i will say is that the two have since made up and the homeowner even took her neighbor out for a cold one afterward.
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xeljanz xr can lower your ability to fight infections, including tuberculosis. serious, sometimes fatal infections, lymphoma and other cancers have happened. don't start xeljanz xr if you have an infection. tears in the stomach or intestines, low blood cell counts and higher liver tests, and cholesterol levels have happened. your doctor should perform blood tests before you start and while taking xeljanz xr, and monitor certain liver tests. tell your doctor if you were in a region where fungal infections are common and if you have had tb, hepatitis b or c, or are prone to infections. xeljanz xr can reduce the symptoms of psoriatic arthritis. don't let another morning go by without talking to your rheumatologist about xeljanz xr.
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lou dobbs is up next. thank you for watching the evening at it. here's lou. >> lou: good evening everyone. our top stories tonight. president trump, the chinese president agreeing to a pause in the tariff increases for three months. the two nations to try to negotiate a comprehensive trade agreement. president trump meeting with the chinese government over the weekend and his trademark is optimism and his commitment to america first. >> the relationship is very special. i think it is going to be a primary reason why we will probably end up getting something good for c
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