tv Lou Dobbs Tonight FOX Business March 3, 2020 7:00pm-8:00pm EST
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lou dobbs is next. have a good evening. ♪ ♪ lou: good evening, everybody. breaking news tonight, we begin with the latest on today's super tuesday election. democratic primary, polls have just closed in vermont and virginia. the former vice president, joe biden has won the virginia primary according to the fox news decision desk. bernie sanders is heavily favored to win in vermont but as of right now, the fox news decision desk said it's not yet have sufficient data to protect him as a winner. following all of the super
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tuesday through tonight's on the 7:30 p.m. eastern, as polls close. many more closing 8:00 p.m. and through the evening will move toward the west coast. president trump leading the nations public health officials, institutions, laboratories and facilities. science, researchers all in the fight against the coronavirus. today, president trump at the national institute of health. there he met with doctors and scientists working to develop a vaccine against the coronavirus pandemic as well as antivirals with which to combat the virus and the president today holding a round table discussion with task force members and national institute of health officials, which he praised the efforts of the nih under the leadership of doctor anthony fauci. >> scientists and researchers all over the world say this is the best there is, i think the world is extremely happy.
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i want to thank everybody at nih and scientists and doctors and everybody, i know you're working around the clock. i know you've made great fines already, it makes us feel very good. we had good meetings yesterday with the companies, you would ultimately go to the companies. we had johnson & johnson and other great companies, they were very positive for the outcome. lou: with all of this, the president also leaning on economic policy as well. demanding interest, to mitigate against the prospect of possibly difficult times ahead for markets and economy. today, the federal reserve responded. cutting interest rates by half a plate and still, the markets moved more on the day. president trump says the federal reserve needs to do more. >> i would say they raise the
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rate, it's too high. it should be competitive. we have the greatest country in the world, we have the strongest country in the world. it's our dollars the world relies on. we should have the low rates. we have a fed who doesn't agree with that. i disagree with that. lou: tonight, the democratic candidates are battling for more than 1300 delegates in those states. the president calling out the radical establishment for their efforts to steal, at least try to steal the nomination once again from bernie sanders. >> i think there's no question the establishment, the democrat establishment is trying to take it away from bernie sanders. no question about that. a lot is going to be hard tonight. we'll see how well biden does,
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we'll see how well sanders does. i would have said two or three days ago, biden was not looking too good, now he is looking better. lou: and dts. having won the state of virginia. president trump today also meeting with a group of republican lawmakers at the white house. they are seeking to find a common approach with which to make major changes in the foreign intelligence surveillance act. there's been discussion that renewal of a controversial spy program would be added to a spending package in which there is funding to fight the coronavirus pandemic. however, the likes of adam schiff have actually agreed with a number of republicans. any reform in pfizer should come in a standalone bill rather than be cast in the dark of night. our first guest tonight at the meeting today with the preside president, he has his own proposal with which to deal with pfizer. joining us tonight, senator rand paul. the foreign relations and
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homeland security committee. great to have you with us. the pfizer right now, it seems as if there's a large contingent on capitol hill. they want to renew and maybe reform it later. after this nation and this president have endured more than three years of spying on american citizens by the fbi and justice department. >> i just came from the white house and the president made it clear, no quibbling about it, absolutely clear, he will not sign a reauthorization of the patriot act unless we reform pfizer. the proposal i gave him was this. don't use pfizer, which is a foreign intelligence court despite americans.
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sibley say that americans, if you want to spy on them, you have to go to a constitutional article three court to get the wiretap. this would protect americans from abuses that happened in the trump campaign but these abuses could happen to republicans or democrats and we have advised people in the fbi or intelligence agencies so i think the best reform, let's take americans out of pfizer and keep the foreign surveillance court targeted towards foreigners. lou: i think that makes all the sense in the world. that's great news. the president will stand and demand reform of those pfizer courts. that have violated his constitutional rights. for years. >> it's not a done deal yet because there were many voices in the room who don't want to reform it, they want to rubberstamp it and their loyalty is to the deep state and not the president and not really to fairness on the constitution. i can tell you it was a spirited debate but i can tell you the president absolutely sites with those of us who say there has to be reform and he's not signing any bill that doesn't have
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reform. lou: and out one person who wants that bill to be passed without reform, that's mitch mcconnell. he said this -- if we could roll this soundbite, i'm told it's not there. he said in that, if we are unable to resolve, my preference would be another extension which would give us more time to talk and for those interested in pfizer reform, i put myself in that camp. the attorney general is addressing that himself. to me, it is dispiriting to hear a senior republican official like that of law that has been misused and abused. >> i can tell you the president was absolutely clear, he didn't pull any punches, he said he does not want this to happen to another president ever again. i'm with him. for me, this is not a partisan thing. i had this viewpoint before president trump and i would say this if it were a democrat
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president who had been abused, nobody who chooses to get involved in politics, can you imagine if the uses on particle activists? with what if you are a right to life activist or a variety of different issues? should you be allowed to be targeted? the people on the other side used the intelligence apparatus for political purposes? is has to to stop. i think this is the time to do it. some of the people in the room who want to reauthorize it, let's wait and study the issue. young man, is not the place or time to do this. they say come back at a later date, that means they don't want to happen. it's a game they play appear to delay things so we don't get reform. lou: will be get this reform this time? i can't imagine too many people successfully standing i got it against it.
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>> typically presidential power is protected by all presidents of both parties, congress tries to take some of the power back for the people but here we have a president who's been abused by executive power of the previous president and he sees clearly that this hour can be abusively used so no, i don't think president trump is weak on this issue. i don't think he's pulling punches. he wants real reform, he told him that and the people who pushed back, he said i tell people every night these rallies, i'm going to fix this problem. look what they did to me. i'm going to fix this problem. he says we can't go out to the american people and say well, we just reauthorized it. or they think of us? the president no space has to be fixed, he feels strongly about it. i feel strongly, mike and jim jordan and other reformers, we all feel strongly. something has to be done. we'll seek but i think nothing is going to be passed without real reform. lou: that is great news you bring us from that meeting. i want to turn quickly to lindsey graham, he's been
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promising there would be investigation, he would investigate the investigators. we seen nothing but statement from him and we've heard nothing but remarks from him. sometimes they don't all line up. at this. >> , 13 months and, he's done absolutely nothing. to carry out that investigation. what is your sense of the judiciary committee and what it's failed to do? >> i think his opinion is he's letting the investigators do this. i think there's a place for public hearings because i don't know him, he may well do a complete job. we may have people brought to justice for lying to the court, all of these words they got on the president's campaign were built upon a house of lies, someone ought to be punished for that. i think we could use the
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judiciary committee but i don't know that we are necessarily going to. you're going to have to wait until the department of justice doesn't. i'm not a fan of the government investigating itself. we keep our fingers crossed that the people who abuse the system will be punished but i don't think there's any guarantee of that. lou: no guarantee. i have to complement for putting, seeking the first subpoena tied to the burisma. he's actually trying to do something. i support him on that. >> we don't know if we have all the republicans. look at that committee and think about who you think might not vote with us and we need to let people know who they are because i will vote with senator johnson and subpoena power but there are some republicans hanging in the pallets. lou: those hanging in the ballot may be elevating themselves on their own. it's hard, we are going to be putting their names out, all who
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resist any kind of effort to "do the right thing" and hold accountable those who have done wrong to this country and this president for years now. we appreciate everything you are doing, thank you so much for being here with us tonight. parts of nashville devastated today after at least two tornadoes touched down in central tennessee last night. tens of thousands of people left without power, a state of emergency declared, 25 people confirmed dead as a result of the storms. rescue teams still going door to door, searching for damaged things for those who are still missing. president trump offering his condolences today. >> we are working with the leaders in tennessee to make sure everything is done properly. fema is already on the ground. i will be going there friday. heart full of sorrow for the lives lost.
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lou: the president taking on as well, all of the issues confronting the nation with the fight against the coronavirus. we'll take that up also tonight, to state completed voting, joe biden, vermont expected to go for bernie sanders but still not enough data. to give in the call. next, 20 minutes, north caroli carolina, enclose an important race. biden, bernie and bloomberg. we take it up with a man who has ran for campaigns like this than anyone else. here next as we continue. stay with us. ♪
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we are going to be saying this a lot tonight, breaking news polls closed in vermont and virginia and joe biden as i said, winning the virginia primary according to the fox news decision desk. biden, right now, more than, as you see there, more than 50% of the vote. it's about 3% of the precinct, is that correct? 1%, excuse me. i got excited. bernie sanders heavily favored
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in his home state of vermont but still, the fox news a decision desk has not made a decision. not enough data to project him the winner. polls close in north carolina at the top of the hour. 7:30 p.m. eastern and six other state at 8:00 p.m. alabama, tennessee, texas, oklahoma, massachusetts and maine. more than 1300 pledged delegates are up for contest tonight. 1357, to be accurate. 34% of the total delegates that the democrats will offer up. hillary clinton today weighing in on the democratic 2020 primary. she almost geared to lecturing. bernie sanders for his call to allow the candidate with the most pledged delegates to earn the parties nomination.
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>> what follows the rules, we've got roles. we had rules last time and we have roles this time. i think it's always a good idea to follow the rules. everybody knew what they were when you got into it. lou: following the rules thing, it's hysterical. [laughter] the words being uttered by missus clinton. following the rules hasn't always been easy for her, has it? she once said she would accept the results of the 2016 election no matter what. that, she still hasn't done. those were the rules but not officially the rules for her. listen to how she reacted to losing the electoral college. >> several candidates, nominees who have won the popular vote and flossed electoral college. what does that say? is says anachronism design for another time no longer works if we move toward one person, one
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vote, that's how we select winners. lou: changed the rules, she said. [laughter] amusing. breaking news now, i told you we would be saying that a lot. bernie sanders has now one. his home state of vermont, that after our decision desk reached sufficient level of data with which to make that projection. after joe biden won the virginia primary, polls closed in north carolina. just about ten minutes. then six other states follow at 8:00 p.m. alabama, tennessee, texas, oklahoma, massachusetts and maine. we'll update you on the results throughout this broadcast. joining us now, white house political director, he's run more campaigns than anyone else. ed, your thoughts on vermont and virginia pretty much as
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expected. >> i think so. reality is, super tuesday has never been as large as this one today. fourteen states, they are larger than south carolina. south carolina 54. eight others basically way bigger than that. south carolina put their tuesday serving biden ahead, that's the game. my sense today, california in 24 hours, they are still counting. texas is critical tonight. north carolina 110, i'm watching because obviously north carolina and alabama and arkansas heavy black vote in we'll see. lou: african-american vote will be most important in which states? >> obviously north carolina and obviously alabama, arkansas and virginia. lou: which way do you think it's going to go? is a going to go forth biden? >> i think so. my sense is, it's sort of become a game now.
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what we might like south carolina. lou: biden and bloomberg and bernie. 15% helps bloomberg. if he can get 15% of the boat. it doesn't appear it's obvious anywhere. that we are going to see bloomberg get that although, there have been a number of organizations pushing the idea that he's going to win 15% in a half dozen states at least. >> he spent more money in california than any election. lou: he could have built a small city. >> the 49ers, if you wanted to. at the end of the day, will seek but the reality is, finally biden sanders race. an intensity that no one else has. the establishment and mainstream media downside today. joe biden is going to be there candidate.
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lou: buttigieg jumping out and klobuchar jumping out, this is surprising, a surprising impact on minnesota. your thoughts about their absence. so soon after their announcements. >> i think she may have been losing which may have led to her getting out. she loses her home state, i think obviously message -. lou: while this is going on, the president of the united states is dealing with china and trade. dealing with russia, iran, the coronavirus. trying to convert a disrupted supply change in southeast asia and china and create a converted manufacturing capability in this country because we are utterly dependent on china in this country for antibiotics, 907% of
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pharmaceutical ingredient, nearly all of them. it's stunning that level of dependency that corporate america pushed this country into. even though we are superpower. >> he's doing the job everybody else wants. he's done effectively. he has a great strong record to ground run on. just focus on being a good president. lou: day in and day out. he's covering mark ground and getting work done. despite it all. thank you, sir. appreciate it. cpac this weekend was a big success including the rousing speech of president trump. we sent john down to maryland to find out what the young conservatives are thinking. >> what makes you are conservative? >> faith, family, love of country, small government, individual responsibility. >> was raised in a christian
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conservative family. that's what i believe and. >> i believe in free market. >> limited government and i don't want the democrat to run the country. >> you think it's tough being conservative in the world of rhinos today? >> i wouldn't say it's tough but you have to stick to your values because -- >> how tough is it to be a conservative? >> all of my professors are democrat and they try to sway you to their fears. you can't speak your mind in class. the professors hate it when you talk about conservative values. >> i will give you a list of a few names. tell me the first word that comes to mind. president trump. >> hero. >> patriot. >> winning. >> the best. >> mike pence. >> mitt romney. >> we are going to go with rats. >> big loser. >> lou dobbs. >> another patriot.
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>> great. >> best personality ever. >> well, there it is. we've got. i'll sit down exclusively tomorrow with mike pence. we'll take on all of the issues of the day and that will include his responsibilities as well. for the coronavirus task force. up next, the president leading the fight against the coronavirus while china holds all of the medical supplies and pharmaceuticals captive. our next guest is a plan to cut our dependency on china, whether be in time for americans in this pandemic? jim banks has ideas here next. stay with us. ♪
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biden has won the north carolina primary. they are also projecting his victory in the virginia primary, bernie sanders has already won the vermont primary according to our decision desk and post closing at the top of the hour in six states. alabama, tennessee, oklahoma, massachusetts and maine it's a busy day and it shaping up as what looks to be a very good night for the former vice president. joining us tonight as congressman jim banks, the house armed services, education and veterans affairs committees, great to have you with us. the president today, the national institute of health meeting with all of those terrific researchers, scientis scientists, break medical staff yesterday with the pharmaceutical companies. he's leading of what is nothing less than the war against the
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coronavirus. your thoughts, if you will, about the limitations of this country right now, so many people are becoming aware that china turned out 97% of our antibiotics, most of our pharmaceuticals or pharmaceutical ingredients. >> this is a wake-up call for the united states of america. i hope it's not too late for that wake-up call to occur. i am grateful that president trump is out the helm. he's shown tremendous leadership in the midst of the coronavirus fight. i'm glad he chose someone i know very well, the vice president to lead the efforts. i served four years in the state legislature during the entire time mike pence was governor in indiana. he's well-equipped to leave these efforts. i'm sick and tired of congress not matching that same intensity that president trump brought to,
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not just against coronavirus but the fight against china. you've seen in the past eight days, eight days ago the president trump asked for $2.5 billion from congress and emergency funding to help despite and they are dragging their feet. in the have billion dollars we are talking, the dollar figures but we are arguing over minor details in the midst of all this, preventing the president from doing what he needs to do. lou: it's clear the democratic party, the party of hate that carried out special counsel investigation against this president, it's wasted his time, the nation's energy and millions and millions of taxpayer dollars and then and impeachment attempt, we shouldn't expect too much of them, even in a crisis that will affect the lives of millions of americans who may contract this illness, as it
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looks now. >> there's so much more we need to do. i want to join the president in this fight, that's why in recent days, we have recovered many of the state pension funds in america, the largest state pension fund in the country, investing and a lot of the same companies building up the chinese military and the chinese economy. we need to do vest public pension funds from investing in china and there's a lot we can do to prevent the va, the largest. lou: can the president do that by executive order? >> if he can, we want to work with him to do that. this is where congress is falling short of the leadership test and doing things like that in preventing the va, the largest medical center in the country from buying medical equipment from china. those are the places congress needs to start and that's where congress is missing the boat. >> this president has talked about america first for the past five years.
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there should be no one unfamiliar with his insistence on that priority. by american, higher american, except corporate america is insistent upon their supply chains and scattering them across south east asia and china instead of preserving proximity and national security for all of the manufacturing plants. how quickly can we do something about it? find other sources besides china and by the way, how about building those facilities in this country now? >> there's language in the authorization act coming up, i served on the armed services committee. sadly the processes of the legislative vehicles take way too long. we have to pass this emergency funding if the president, what he's asking for in the funding to fight the coronavirus. that's where we start. lou: i hope you and other from others on capitol hill will join
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with the president. he needs a group around him. if he pleads, he will have to use the pen and the phone. he can't wait for the moronic sloths, schumer and pelosi and the like. he needs to help the american people and he has done a hell of a job on his own to this. lou: is a first president in my lifetime to take on the china threat. every other president has gone out of their way to appease china and turn a blind eye. that's why i'm glad to fight with him along the way. lou: absolutely. thank you, great to have you with us. we are coming right back with much more, the latest from the polls. ♪
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one harvard university epidemiologist warning that up to 70% of the world population could contract the coronavirus. doctor mark said 1% of patients who developed symptoms could well die. westchester, new york, hundreds of people congregants have been ordered to self quarantined after being exposed to a man who tested positive for the virus from all services have been canceled. worldwide, more than 3100 deaths now. 93000 cases, 40000 patients have recovered. in america, 122 cases have now been confirmed.
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california to the northeast, to the southeast, georgia, florida. nine people have died, all of them in the state of washington. joining us tonight, doctor albert from the yale's school of public health, the department chairman, professor of epidemiology and medicine, it's great to have you with us. i want to start with the world health organization and its role in this. talking with secretary a czar, he's seemed to emphasize their role and i was surprised, i feel that we have the expertise, scientific knowledge and public health system to handle it on our own. >> thank you very much. let me emphasize that there are a lot of strong public health
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officials and authorities throughout the world. who be one. cdc the other. to be a joke has been playing a leading role in the response, global response to the coronavirus. this is important because as we are playing out now, the ability to control the epidemic abroad is going to influence how we are going to fight the epidemic here in our homeland. lou: our homeland. the fact of the matter is, we are, we have tests that have been deficient from of the cdc was not properly prepared. we have a response that is considerably challenging, china or even south korea right now. i want to show the ratio betwe between. million of the population. we are looking at south korea,
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109,000 tests, 2138, similar 23, 345, a drop down to 386 million. the united states, the latest numbers from the cdc, they hadn't yet updated the cdc website. from 472, it's not over 1200 plus. that works out to 3.6 million in the population. we are flagging terribly in our testing. >> you make an important. let me say first of all in response to a public health emergency, in response to a global epidemic, the important thing to look forward, stay focused on what we need to do. there will be time in the future to go back and understand the lesson fund. it's quite clear was like united states has to do. we have to, as the cdc, fda, we
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have to increase testing capacity. this is being done at high speeds. lou: this is not an academic exercise, forget the expression for me, it's my responsibility here to fulfill my response public to inform the public. it is one that the president is insisting upon across the board. when we see lives hang in the ballots in terms of the response and by the way, we are not going to sit there and be dumb animals watching as our government decides what it's going to do or not do. we are going to insist upon a level of effort and response and innovation that is not going to be for the archives of history, it for right now, making certain our public officials are elected officials and doing everything.
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by the way, we see a number of them not doing everything they can. this administration thank god, is doing all one could ask. >> i think you raise a good. lou: i enjoy talking with you. >> you are on a roll. on that note, the more important., we need to know what other countries have done. we need to learn from there. cap hong kong and singapore, small island but they were able to get in front of the curve. that's what we need to do here. you are right, the administration has been lagging behind. i think overall, the administration now is taking the cases we are seeing in new york city and washington, they are not taking it seriously. the major message is that from the public health's pointmac of view, that may change message in
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the united states, no americans left behind. if we don't provide access to treatment and testing, therapeutics, ceiling sets important i think your ministration deserves great credit. announcing today the government is going to pay for the care of the hospitalization of uninsured patients who contract the coronavirus. you know as a society, we are going to pay for it either way by the government should step up and relieve everyone of that burden and concern and even fear. this can be complicated enough but i give the president and his administration great credit to have done so. don't you? >> that's an important step but i think we need to go beyond that. as i was saying before, have to make sure we leave no american
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out of this access to care treatment, whether it health insurance, health status, economic status . lou: even talking about insurance, the president said anyone uninsured will be covered their care. i don't think you can raise the barr on that, do you? >> we have to raise the barr on that. we have to make sure we not only do it for the uninsured but we have to do this for the whole population. a nursing home, present, you've seen the epidemic in china. we have to do this among immigrant populations. if we don't capture all the people, we stigmatize the
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process and people don't get healthcare. they are not entering this is an from we will have infections that we are not going to be able to detect. lou: a group of people in a nursing home in washington state, unfortunately, they have been exposed to the disease. their results are deadly. we appreciate it. thank you so much. come back soon. i'm sure you will agree. >> yes. lou: a check now on tonight super tuesday primaries. fox news decision desk calling the race in north carolina or former vice president joe biden, biden also projected to win the race as we told you in virginia, bernie sanders projected to win his home state of vermont right now, biden is doing very well. let's look at the numbers there. 22.4%.
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that's where we are right now. we'll be checking in and bring you up-to-date on the other races as we approach 8:00 p.m. cap next, weeks ago, many said china would be the dominant political and economic force in the world. is the coronavirus changing that? china, a pandemic in crisis in its own thinking. soon, the rest of the world may feel the same. what will happen when this pandemic runs its course? we'll take that up and peter, next. we are coming right back. stay with us. ♪
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"wall street" today, stocks closing lower, the dow 786 points. s&p lost 87. nasdaq down to 68. heavy trading again. i do mean have a great 6.4 billion shares. joining us tonight, peter, a political strategist, he specializes in global energy, demographics and security and he has a brand-new book today called this united nations. the scramble for power and an ungoverned world.
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it's great to have you with us. congratulations on the book. we recommend it highly to our audience and by the way, with that tie, i would recommend it almost doubling. [laughter] let's start with the coronavir coronavirus, its impact on the most populous nation on the earth. china, which has been presumed to be the heir to this century, some decades distant. what impact do you see? >> you've got to first start examining by why china is the next superpower. lou: i don't. lou: >> 1.2 billion people, the only reason the china unified much less economically involved with the rest of the world, is because the americans changed the rules of the game after world war ii. we bribed up by the soviets. they will build a global trade
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where you can not get shot and still make money in exchange, your face down and a nuclear ever getting with us. that worked great. for china, they've never been unified, this would allow them to import energy, export goods, modernize industrialize, organize. that only works so long as the united states keep doing what it's been doing. they don't have the wider world so they can't keep oil flowing and product flowing out with out americans say so. all the u.s. has to do is go home. we can manage that. coronavirus is in many ways, kind of this weird gift. it's giving us a sneak peek into a world without china. that's where we are headed anyway. we are just getting a heads up. lou: the vulnerabilities in our global system are, is that what you are referring to? the global system? >> and manufacturing supply
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chains. the american companies most exposed as nothing more. lou: it certainly is. 700,000 employees producing those iphones, down to about half-million now. the reality is, apple is hardly a long. pharmaceuticals are 85% from china. 97% of our antibiotics from china. we have an immense dependency because we have some fools who run corporate america and "wall street" who decided the proximity was no longer important. in terms of production and distribution the consumer that they are trying to serve and make billions of dollars from. it's a world turned upside down because now we need the pharmaceuticals weekly and reliably. >> i wouldn't call it foolish because 11 straight administrations, we chose to
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supper nice the global border, this is a good deal. that would be relevant about 30 years ago. lou: you have to make that leap, which i have never been able to. that we have sacrificed middle-class in our production bridges on security. i think we have purchased security with our military, our research and development and technology and advanced weaponry. i think that went a long ways but that minor difference. i and what you see and the respective fate for both the united states and china. >> we've seen some companies adapt better. ever since the trump administration came in and started changing tariff policy, there have been a lot of firms who have taken advantage of this to get ahead of the curve.
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in addition, the shale revolution has led to the greatest reindustrialization process greater than world war for. coronavirus is this third strike, and anyone who didn't want to get with the program for various reasons all of a sudden is seeing just how exposed they really are. now, there's always the question of time, but if you look at the issue of cost, between a labor costs, energy costs, input costs and assistance ports, maintaining an industrial -- this is all going to come back. the question is is it comes back in calendar year 2020 or 2022. lou: well, that is quite a choice, and it is, you know, it's a conversation i would love to continue for another 15 minutes, but unfortunately, we've got an election today. it's super tuesday. these things happen. luckily, this also happened thanks to you, this united nations, we recommend it to you
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highly. peter, good luck with your book. >> my pleasure. thank you. lou: our poll last night, which candidate will win super tuesday? joe biden, bernie sanders, michael bloomberg or president trump? get ready for the surprise. 74% of you said president trump. and senator rand paul tonight talking about president trump's commitment to fisa reform after a meeting at the white house. >> well, i just came from the white house, and the president made absolutely clear, no quibbling about it, absolutely clear he will not sign a clean reauthorization of the patriot act unless we reform fisa. the proposal i gave him was this: don't use fisa. lou: don't use fisa, reform fisa, and the president says no way will he do otherwise. good news for america once more courtesy, our president. tomorrow i'll have an exclusive talk with vice president mike pence, and i'll be joining our
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super tuesday coverage in just a moment hosted by none other than neil cavuto. that all starts, well, in a matter of is seconds. it starts, in fact, right now. i get to say good night. ♪ ♪ ♪ ♪ >> you're watching fox business coverage of super tuesday. here is neil cavuto. neil: welcome, everybody. well, we are three out of the fourteen states now that are having the crucial primaries. 1,357 delegates up for grabs, two-thirds of the amount you need for the democratic nomination, 1,991. here's a look at what states we can call right
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