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tv   The Five  FOX News  April 10, 2019 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT

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"the five" starts right now. ♪ >> jesse: hello, everybody. i am jesse watters with emily compagno, juan williams juan williams, dana perino and greg gutfeld. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five" ." >> ♪ i can see clearly now, the rain is gone ♪ >> jesse: i like it. >> juan: there you go. >> jesse: better than greg's music. we got the email about greg's music and that will never happen again. i am looking forward to juan's music. it's going to be much better.
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juan, it's probably your best quality. [laughter] >> juan: thank you. after your music, i set i wanted to party with you because i like that music. >> jesse: democrats going for further off the deep end. let's start with socialist 2020 candidate bernie sanders unveiling a new medicare for all bill. the plan being cosponsored by fellow 2020 conductors liz warren, cory booker, kamala harris and kirsten gillibrand. sanders joking that it will put private insurance companies out of business. >> what our system does is get rid of insurance companies and drug companies making billions of dollars in profit every single year. >> what happens to those insurance companies after your plan is implemented? >> if you want cosmetic surgery, under medicare for all, we cover all basic health care needs. i suppose if you want to look more beautiful, work on the nose, they can do that. >> blue cross blue shield would
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be reduced to nose jobs? >> something like that. >> jesse: bernie not mentioning how he's going to pay for but several estimates say medicare for all would cost over $30 trillion. while president trump is in texas today, dhs releasing new numbers showing a surge at the border. there were over 100,000 at -- apprehensions at march alone but democrats don't seem to care. alexandria ocasio-cortez attacking republicans and saying she knows what's really causing the crisis. ready? a far right loves to drum up fear and resistance to immigrants. have you ever noticed they never talk about what's causing people to flee their homes in the first place. perhaps that's because they will be forced to confront one major factor in global migration. climate change. aoc's climate hysteria didn't end there. she also said this. >> i think what we have laid out here is a very clear moral problem. in terms of leadership, if we
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fail to act or even if we delay in acting, we will have blood on our hands. i don't know if you're allowed to... to agree with that, would you agree with that assessment? >> jesse: that was awkward. dana, i don't know where you want to start, with burning or aoc. i will commend the interviewer for "cbs evening news" saying blue cross blue shield reduced to nose jobs. >> dana: great reporter. this is what i kind of like about the bernie thing. at least he's being honest. and bold. one of the frustrations democrats had with president obama and obamacare was that, remember the debate over a public option or not. it was almost like you got the nationalized or socialized medicine nose under the tent but they weren't willing to go the full way. you had people in the middle. young people they didn't quite make enough money, made too much
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money to be on medicaid but not quite enough to qualify for this or that plan and it's been confusing and people are frustrated. now they have worked out some kinks so it's a little more popular now than it was in years past but what bernie is saying is let's do away with it. let's just do it. be bold. i think he is arguably, for the announced candidates, the front runner for the democrats. i don't know if this he can go the distance with it but at least he's not lying. >> jesse: it's terrifying because i don't think a majority of americans want their private health care plans taken away. i think barack obama was successful and why he got reelected, at least he pretended to be moderate on some issues. they got shellacked over obamacare twice in the midterms. >> greg: that is true, jesse. very true. talking about immigration, no immigrant fleas to countries that embrace sanders or aoc's
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ideas. they aren't fleeing climate change. they are actually fleeing the ideas that belong to aoc and bernie, and they come here, this horrible capitalist society that's crated more wealth and prosperity. sanders is a millionaire. even socialists who hate the system can get rich and the system and there should be a tv show called "beverly hills socialist." it would be very good. i have to say we live in a world where if you don't address an issue, that vacuum will be filled by someone else. who proved that? donald trump with emigration. we are going 30 years, 40 years to this immigration period where both parties are screwing around, not sure what to do and he sinks his teeth into it like a pitbull and he will not let go. i guarantee you this thing is going to be going on until the very end. as a republican, conservative or libertarian, you may not think climate change or health care is a huge problem but if you ignore it at your own peril. i am never sure where to put the
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accent. peril. you forfeit the pulpit to people with ideas, some of them are crazy. some of them are not so crazy. trump proves that if you don't seize the problem, someone else will. these problems are solvable. there are people on the left and the right, the stewart brands of the world and the bill gates of the world who believe you can solve climate change with generation 4 advanced nuclear reactors. this is not your old man's nuclear power. it can eliminate meltdown risk and feeds off the nuclear waste is an energy source. you have a solution that republicans actually embraced, take this argument away from aoc. she might embrace this idea if she reads about it. >> juan: i am surprised, greg. i think we are in agreement. i think republicans when they had control of the house and senate did nothing on climate
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change, did nothing on immigration, do nothing on health care. health care is pretty big. because everyone is saying bernie's plan is going to cost a lot. actually bernie's plan will cost the government and potentially us as taxpayers more but it will cut down on your medical bills. it's very appealing. right now look at what happened in the midterms, jesse. >> jesse: who set our bills are going down? >> juan: that's what the charts -- let me say this. the midterm elections are really proof in the pudding of exactly how politically powerful it is to say to voters listen, donald trump and the republicans, 60 times repealing an replace question why can you give them control of both and nothing happens. democrats step into the void, as you described in democrats are saying we are going to come up with something, we are working on something we care about. with calling the change -- climate change, talking about the green new deal. people say these guys are
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actually serious. >> greg: then you should be embracing donald trump's relentless attempt to deal with immigration. >> juan: no. i think he is mean-spirited. >> greg: he is doing exactly what you want. >> jesse: not mean-spirited when she says you have blood on your hands? >> juan: in terms of climate change? >> jesse: yes. >> juan: i think that was extreme. >> emily: the situation in terms of medicare for all, you started out so strong, it's an abscess. it is overlaying these gross, disgusting band-aids over an existing abscess. the cost for this can only say it transfers from the patient of the federal government, that is us and our debt grows by 2 billion a day and the interest alone annually will soon become an 8 trillion. these nebulous vague ideas with no specificity, we are the ones that eventually absorb the cost. it is bipartisan, both sides. the debt situation. when those on the left are calling for sustainability, the
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biggest fractured system is what is in existence. the people who are the power to change it are those sitting in legislature right now. there are some medicare contracts where the cost of the stamp to build the patient for what's left on the contract exceeds what they would recoup. if they fail to send the bill, if they say it's not worth it because it's good business process, its medicare fraud. >> dana: can i add one thing. i don't want people to think that i think medicare for all is a good idea. i am saying that bernie is at least being bold and honest. i want to point out one thing. last week there was a headline in the u.k. newspaper and i read it to my husband. >> greg: he can't read. >> dana: as you know, he grew up in britain. i surgery patients forced to go blind because they don't get the surgeries because they are in line for so long that surest way it is. >> jesse: but they can get nose jobs all they want? >> dana: can't get that
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either. >> greg: plastic surgery is getting cheaper because you can't get it insured so it's competitive. >> juan: everyone talking about government but government costs less in terms of administrative costs for medicare. >> dana: no. >> greg: never happen. >> juan: the bottom line is a drive down the cost. >> jesse: sure it does, juan. that's what they set about obamacare. >> juan: dana is talking about people can get eye surgery in britain. there are some of the people here that go without any kind of medical care because of the high costs. >> greg: they are young and healthy. >> jesse: millions of americans like their private health insurance. just affix the whole problem. >> juan: i'm seeing there's ways to fix it that would allow people -- >> jesse: let's not destroy a huge industry. >> juan: let it be and let the ideas come out. >> emily: coverage does not equate to health care. >> jesse: got to go. bill barr grabbing a major bombshell today saying spine did occur on the trump campaign. -- spying did occur on the trump
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campaign is a big deal. yes, i think spying did occur. the question is whether it was predicated. i'm not suggesting it wasn't but i need to explore that. i am not saying that improper surveillance occurred. i am saying that i am concerned about it and looking into it. that's all. >> dana: this comes on the heels of learning that barr has assembled a team to investigate the origins of the fbi investigation into trump's 2016 campaign. many democrats criticizing the attorney general for what they say is unacceptable handling of the mueller report. >> i believe the attorney general of the united states believes he needs to protect the president of the united states. >> should not be briefed before congress sees the entire document. it indicates he sees the president as his client, not the country. >> to take the opportunity to
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say clearly and forcefully the white house was not briefed. >> asked whether he discussed it with the white house. at that point he just he just shut down. it was clear to me the white house had some input in the letter. >> dana: president trump pushing back against those claims. >> i have not seen the mueller report. i have not read the mueller report. i won. no collusion, no obstruction. i won. everyone knows i won. and they know it was illegally started. the whole thing was illegal. >> dana: jesse, tell us why this isn't news. >> jesse: it's not news to fox news because of we've been reporting -- >> dana: i mean -- [laughter] >> jesse: i think it's big news to people at msnbc and cnn because this came out of the blue for them. fox news has been reporting this for over a year and a half because we know this has been confirmed reporting. "the new york times,"
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"wall street journal," "washington post" have all said that multiple trouble visuals were electronically surveilled during the campaign. manafort, papadopoulos, carter page, mike flynn. human intelligence assets were used when people went to great britain and london. we know kristi noem was involve involved. >> dana: you know a lot. >> jesse: i do. is this hannity or is this "the five"? >> juan: good question. >> jesse: we know that. the question is wasn't legally justified to launch a counterintelligence investigation into an opponents political campaign? what was the evidence? there was traitorous activity. what was the evidence there was collusion? right now there was no collusion and no conspiracies there when you present to the fisa court a warrant application, you need verified information and there was none. we note that the steele dossier was not verified so it looks like right now political bias --
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>> dana: the president said he's thinking about, i presume they are waiting for the report to be released by barr but that he might declassify those underlying documents, the fisa documents. >> emily: that would be amazing. the more transparency the better. what boggles my mind are those that are questioning barr's attempt or anyone's attempt to investigate this. our individual rights against unreasonable or warrantless searches is fundamental to the country. it's the fourth amendment to the constitution. i don't understand why any type of expounding any type of governmental limits should be accepted without an investigation. what was the patriot act? what were the million lawsuits that came after that when people freaked out when that was used to solicit information from media or look into individuals who went to las vegas or copyright infringement, random things. remember the overreach? what about facial technology in public places.
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why here ny now is this all of a sudden okay? >> jesse: that's a great question. a lot of the civil liberties people did raise that issue after the war on terror had begun. what if they look into personal stuff? what if it's exploited by politicians or the government. people said that's not going to happen. it's being used on al qaeda and our enemies and it looks like it happen to an opposing political campaign. >> juan: let me say quickly that bill barr later said, as i understand it, he is saying he doesn't think spying is a negative word. it could be human intelligence. >> emily: that's a gross oversimplification. he is not saying it's not a negative thing. >> juan: he saying it's not a negative word and he has no evidence. it's important to say from his own mouth he said i have no evidence to cite, and he said, to sites about any actual spying. >> jesse: that's not what he said. he said there was spying. he doesn't have evidence that
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was politically motivated. >> juan: he said he had no evidence of spying. >> jesse: juan. you can't say that. >> juan: later he says he's not talking about the fbi. he's talking about intelligence generally and remember this, audience, the russians, everybody says we are spying on trying to influence the use of propaganda and human sources, the 2016 campaign. much of the intelligence community was trying to understand what the russians were doing. it was not directed at anyone political campaign in this country. with regard to papadopoulos, he left the campaign when they asked for some kind of tracking and surveillance. that wasn't -- >> dana: let's get great again. >> juan: the key point is republicans are asking -- >> jesse: i thought you said you were going to make it quick. >> juan: republican saying let's have the fisa document unclassified. >> dana: greg, you have the floor. >> greg: do i? i don't know what it looks like.
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i hate the media. i really hate the media because i have to say the russians win again. were having this hearing based on the issue to create conflict and that was fulfilling putin's plan. a positive incentive which is profit aligns with a negative outcome, which is division which is what the media wants. when i was a kid, i was a tv addict. i love television, okay? why do i hate summer? because of the repeats. i was stuck with the reruns. this is the summer reruns of the collusion delusion. cnn needs this. msnbc needs this. it's designed to keep the post mueller depressives comfortable until real news returns because frankly this whole hearing is done to extend -- >> dana: it was supposed to be about the budget. it was supposed to be about the budget. they want him on the ropes there. he of course, i think he's one of the most effective test of fires in front of congress. >> greg: probably the greatest
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there ever was. >> dana: juan has a song. actress lori loughlin facing 40 years behind bars for her role in the college admissions scandal but is that fair? we will debate it next. >> ♪ i will feel all right ♪ let's get together and feel all right ♪ ♪ drivers just wont put their phones down. we need a solution. introducing... smartdogs. the first dogs trained to train humans.
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as we previously reported, the "full house" star was allegedly charged with paying $500,000 to help daughters get into the university of southern california. some legal experts, they are wondering if the punishment is too harsh. they are saying this is an example of "public shaming." greg, do you think it's public shaming? >> greg: this is the downside to being famous. now matter how beloved you are, people want the correction. if you are on this planet and their people that have so much more and you wonder why, this is a therapeutic ritual. it's the scapegoating that we used to do many, many years ago. it's the dark side of celebrity privilege. you can have a great life and then when you trip and fall, society will be there to punish you and punish you consistently and often forever. the greater lesson here is the overemphasis on elite institutions. we don't need these colleges. they are getting too expensive.
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we should be turning up podcasting into accredited courses. people can set a home in their pajamas. >> dana: even law school. >> greg: who needs law school? >> juan: obviously felicity huffman made a plea deal so presumably she's going have to spend less time in jail and in court. now we have loughlin who hasn't made a deal and exposes herself therefore to the potential of more jail time. i'm thinking to myself, does she have a bad lawyer or a really good lawyer? it's a nonviolent crime. you could make some kind of deal. >> emily: i hear what you're saying. i think the theme is the hubris and everybody hates ego and emanating out of hollywood is ego. if someone is contrite and apologetic about something, i.e. full city hoffman, the government likes it and so do we. we forgive you. we love a good fall but we love the resurrection. lori loughlin strolled an -- and
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there and she said she didn't believe she could face jail time. guess what, sister. the government can correct you on that. prosecutors using it as leverage because of the penalty. so if one believe it's public shaming, taken up with their legislators. that is why 97% of federal defendants plead out. half get sentences below the guidelines. not even the minimum. 60% were recommended by the feds meaning if you play ball and you agree to a plea deal, you will get on average 26 months for fraud rather than 40 years. i can't speak to the quality of their attorneys but i will bet you it was her hubris. >> juan: jesse, let me say you have kids that are going to want to go to college pretty shortly. i think i'm like these two there was a real violation of the system. your kids didn't really deserve to go to school and you are gaming the system and cheating
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other kids. >> jesse: that's absolutely true. i did a deep dive on the lori loughlin situation. you know how e! has that channel with the exclamation. they did an amazing report on this and all of the anonymous sources you could take to the bank. you should try e! sometime. >> dana: i like that. >> jesse: pulled back the curtain. it was fascinating to me. lori, otherwise known as lori loughlin. she grew up in a middle-class background in long island and her husband didn't even have a college degree, became a self-made millionaire. their daughters are not speaking to them. they are living in seclusion right now. friends who they thought were friends are no longer wanting to be seen in public with them. she actually didn't think she would face any jail time. i believe she was misled by her attorney but she lives in a $14 million mansion, six bedrooms and now she's looking
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at 40 years. if you think to yourself this will never happen to me, this could very much happen to you. greg, these prosecutors, they have to bring this person down. they have to bring her down because i have to seize the mob. the mob wants justice, vengeance and this could happen. but the "full house" people she has been working with, bob saget and uncle jesse and candace cameron, they have stuck by her and i think -- >> dana: i hope that they -- >> greg: you are auditioning. [laughter] >> dana: i hope they will visit her in prison. i know a couple of things about this. the assistant u.s. attorney apparently had told them this is the evidence we have on you. if you plead, fine. if you don't, we will add additional charges. money-laundering is the additional charge and that's how you end up with more. plus this is a financial crime. you can't just find them.
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they have money. it doesn't matter. if you are to find somebody else, with a middle-class income, it's a real punishment. money is not a problem for them so it's not a big deal. the other thing is that they have the tapes remember, the phone calls. they haven't been played, we haven't heard all the evidence yet. that will be on e! >> juan: why didn't she make the deal? >> dana: she probably thinks that in a jury she will be found not guilty. >> jesse: my sources are saying that she was in denial and she never thought she would face any prison time. that's what our sources at e! say. >> juan: the latest fallout from the opioid crisis. gregory up next with why the cdc is now backtracking on its prescription crackdown. that's on "the five" ." >> ♪ the time has come
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>> ♪ guide me along the way >> juan: do you like elvis presley? for work i do. the king, one of the greats, as we like to say, dana. >> dana: i have heard of elvis presley. >> greg: in an article published in "u.s. news & world report" where it's shown how government can make almost anything worse, in the wake of the opioid crackdown, the cdc has had painkiller should be a last resort for patients. the result: medical societies greatly reduced prescriptions, insurers refuse to cover them for patients with cancer or sickle cell anemia. even when patients weren't denied coverage, they had to jump through more hoops than dolphins at seaworld. there is no denying we have got it all. problem but to make it worse with broad strokes based on fear and misinformation. the problem is and prescription opioids. but street fentanyl. the addiction rate for prescriptions is low.
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the overdoses from street drugs are not. targeting the prescription side harms cancer patients as well as other people with chronic and acute pain. as the media frames it as an epidemic, what you get is the same old one side crushes all reaction that smacks every fly with a hammer. if you're a conservative and disagree, consider firearms. should you punish lawful gun owners for the crimes of street gangs armed with illegal weapons? know, that would be a violation of your rights. why suspend that logic here? the problem with opioids is that they work. the worst thing you can do is let the government transfer business to the drug dealer who is more than happy to oblige. dana, the good news here is that the cdc is actually kind of changing their story and say now you can prescribe them for certain things. they are kind of loosening the reins. >> dana: they overreacted to a problem. people were worried. to the bad actors, there were some, pushing out tens of
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thousands of pills to one little town. fake prescriptions, all of that. as you said, the government messes things up, right? i have an idea. let's have it take over all of our health care. >> greg: there you go. >> dana: that's the thing i don't understand of the whole medicare for all peace but we will find out as he does his town hall with us on monday. i also think when you have government overreaction to a problem, you see it over and over again. it's about to happen in the tech sector. government is always behind on innovations, technology, and trying to make up for lost time and they end up screwing things up. >> greg: emily, during prohibition, there were a lot of deaths attributed to bathtub gin because you couldn't buy it in the store. you had to make it. ten cases happening with opioids. people end up with street drugs and they die. isn't it better to have prescriptions where they can be modulated and moderated? >> emily: yes.
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also i want viewers to understand their right and a rash of lawsuits that has come to conclusions. a large amount of settlements. for example, i want to use oklahoma as a case study for viewers to understand. $270 million settlement, all of the monies, private money from drugmakers who did not admit liability. it's going to state institution institutions. that is all staying within the state of oklahoma. who do you think is going to fund this after the initial 270 million goes to establishing the national center for drug addiction treatment and providing those medicines. taxpayers will assume that debt afterwards obviously. as you'll i'm sure remember after the big tobacco fiasco in the late '90s, there was a huge, the debacle was what happened with the money mismanagement after millions of dollars in payments and settlements played out.
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everyone should keep track and note what is occurring with the settlements and what happens and who carries the bill moving forward. >> greg: there has been some progress, juan, in the sense that i think president trump convinced china took crackdown on the chinese fentanyl and the drug dealers. i don't know if they are being punished by death that they are arrested. in china, it's possible. >> juan: in agreement with you but i think where we part company as i think a lot of doctors, i think the pharmaceutical companies pushed legal opioids at a higher rate and for some communities, especially poor communities, tragic consequences. when we hear about settlements, even if they don't admit liability, the reason for the settlement is that they know they could get hit even harder. we had pain management before we had opioids. there's other ways to deal with pain. but i think if we pull back and say you know what, people should have total access to opioids.
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we don't understand the doctors in fact are part of the problem. we don't understand the manufacturers. >> greg: government doesn't know more than doctors. >> juan: we can talk about abortion on that front that i agree with you. i do think that when government sees that the people are being hurt and we do have high rates of deaths tied to this, both those streets and before that -- >> greg: they have been very, very inaccurate on that cure opioid overdoses. the rate of addiction from people who use opioids is so small. the two major studies that i've read show it's 1%. >> jesse: tell me more about this bathtub gin. [laughter] >> juan: that's what got you? >> greg: it's a great analogy that if you make something illegal, people will just flock to the illegal. i'm sure that's never happened you, jesse. >> jesse: no, never happened to me. greg, people say about you, you're on the trump train, driving the trump train. judy chu.
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not on this. you're fighting against the trump war on opioids. >> greg: i think he's being cynical. >> dana: i think he's being inaccurate. it's not about the train but about the issue. >> juan: what is going on today? >> jesse: are you going to fact-check me? >> greg: we've got to go. looking forward to the next election, juan. families are texting at home instead of talking. >> ♪ said the joker to the thief ♪ ♪ too much confusion ♪ i can't get no relief ♪ ♪ businessmen --
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♪ >> ♪ let's dance >> emily: is this the latest example of americans tech addiction. new report says families are texting each other while inside the same house instead of actually talking or yelling. for me, i hate yelling. i can't stand it. it makes me extremely uncomfortable or. why are you looking at me like that? >> juan: conversation or confrontation? >> emily: just yelling. >> greg: get to the point!
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>> emily: i am not down with yelling. if someone is yelling, i will not respond. walked down and say where is that yellow sweater? >> juan: i think that's good but i thought you were saying you would rather them text you then confront you. >> dana: she is saying don't yell. please don't yell. if it means you're going to text me, fine. i don't know. i don't have kids. >> juan: my thinking is texting is not the same as talking. it's not the same as face-to-face. everyone says technology is bringing us closer together. i think it's driving us apart because we are in constant contact but i don't think we are having meaningful conversations. if you are upset with me or your husband or something and you say i'm going to cinema text, it's like i can't tell. i can't see your face, i don't know the nuance, i don't know how serious it is. i think it's terrible. >> emily: that's why you use
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in emoji. >> greg: no, no, no. you're kidding but i think the biggest advancement in communication. i agree with juan about everything he said. the emoji phenomenon it's like we are regressing to cave paintings. do not underestimate the power of an emoji to reduce tension in a text or get out of the conversation or get into a conversation. it's so strange how much power a little yellow ball with a little bit of hearts or something can get you out of so much trouble. i think that's huge. >> jesse: what's your most recent emoji? >> greg: turd. [laughter] i said that to everybody. >> jesse: what's your top, latest, most frequently used emoji? you are not serious. >> greg: i like a lightning strike with a turd. >> dana: those are mine.
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and a basketball. >> juan: when you send that to me, i should know greg is really mad. >> greg: it reduces -- you can't get in a fight with someone with an emoji. >> dana: i use them, i like it it. i remember liz cheney, won her children were younger, one of them texted asking what's for dinner. she said no, no, that's not happening. you're going to have to come and act me -- ask me. >> greg: and she sent them to get mel. >> juan: you can't tax from gitmo. >> dana: i like an emoji. i think it works very well. sometimes i will ask, can you bring me a cup of tea if i'm upstairs and i don't want to yell. >> emily: you need a bell. >> juan: my goodness. >> emily: it depends, if you are texting to say hey, babe, coffee is ready.
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>> greg: babe? >> juan: i have done this with my children. they are not allowed to speak. if you're sitting at the table. they are loud and they get annoying. if you're at the table and they are in a timeout but you want them to pass you something, i would text them "pass the butter." at the table. they can't speak. >> greg: beautiful. >> jesse: if they are in timeout. i want them to listen. >> juan: i'm confused. >> emily: "one more thing" is up next. every day, newday helps veterans buy a home with no down payment and not one dollar out of pocket for closing costs.
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no down payment, no closing costs. why rent when you can buy? e4á: craftsmanship and technology that have made the rx the leading luxury suv of all time. lease the 2019 rx 350 for $409 a month for 36 months. experience amazing at your lexus dealer.
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itso chantix can help you quit "slow turkey." along with support, chantix is proven to help you quit. with chantix you can keep smoking at first and ease into quitting so when the day arrives, you'll be more ready to kiss cigarettes goodbye. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix. you may have nicotine withdrawal symptoms. stop chantix and get help right away if you have changes
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♪ >> there he is the birthday boy mr. juan williams 65 today, >> juan: i want that money, send it in. >> dana: did you sign up? you have to or you will get fined. as a public service announcement. >> one, happy birthday. you have your banana pudding. [laughter] i love it. >> dana: i like the sparkly one, that is cute. that is very generous of you. what a pleasure to celebrate with my >> the five: family and i had a celebration this past weekend with my own family in d.c. take a look, here i am with my daughter who made this baseball fan a wonderful cake, take a
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look at the close-up of the cake, folks. as you can see my ages at home plate. here i am before blowing out the candles and guess who help me blow it out, my grandkids, eli. and thanks to all my fox friends, it has been a great day for this old coot. >> dana: and the cat did not eat your cake. >> unlike ely's cake. >> one heck of a shirt there. >> if you go to fox nation, my interview with the professor's they are. he is a genius. you have to check out my podcast, foxnewspodcast.com and it's with dr. mary lou jepsen who developed sm mri to read your thoughts. visualize and this thing will blow your brains all over the place. and now it is time for black hole news. this is amazing, scientists have finally revealed the first image
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of a black hole. look at that, and all i think of is, just eaten at aaa. yeah, seriously. i made that joke, producer. >> dana: i'm going to save one more thing for tomorrow because we are out of time and emily, go, go, go. >> and orkin woman fearing for her safety called the police to report a burglar in her bathroo. and she heard rustling noises and could see shadows under the door. the deputies requested a canine officer for a backup and multiple demands to come out, the police guns drawn and they found a trapped, automated robot vacuum. and made light of the situation, sharing a wanted poster of a repeat offender, but at least we know he made a clean getaway. >> dana: that is very good.
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>> greg: i give it a c. >> juan: is anybody besides me going to eat the cupcakes? all right, have some cupcakes and a happy birthday. emily's music is tomorrow, the episode of speed 29 "special report" with bret. >> bret: this is fox news alert with bret baier. mitch mcconnell, shortly a wide range of issues including the 2020 campaign bernie sanders medicare for all plan immigration and the mueller investigation, that is where we began tonight. attorney general william barr says he believes someone spied on the trump presidential campaign and then it is a big deal. he spent another day on capitol hill with the mueller report and defended his decision not to release unredacted topic, chief intelligence catherine herridge shows us what happened.

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