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tv   Outnumbered  FOX News  March 6, 2020 9:00am-10:00am PST

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be an effective hand sanitizer. >> appreciate it, have a wonderful weekend. in the meantime, "outnumbered" starts right now. >> see you soon. >> fox news alert, president trump surveying tornado damage in tennessee just days after powerful storms tore through the central part of the state, including to nashville. killing at least 24 people, several of them children. on wednesday the president tweeted the usa stands with the people of tennessee 100%. joining him today is governor bill lee and senators lamar alexander and michelle blackburn. we will keep an eye on the president's visit throughout the hour. >> another fox news alert. president trump will be heading to the cdc headquarters in atlanta today after signing an $8.3 billion coronavirus emergency spending bill in washington this morning. the bill includes $3 billion for
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vaccine research. $2 billion to help state and local federal governments to respond. here is the president of. >> we have very low numbers compared to major countries throughout the world. our numbers are lower than just about anybody. in terms of death, i don't know what the con is today. is it 11? 11 people. in terms of cases, it's very few. if you look at other countries we are a tiny fraction because we are of strong at the borders. >> right now there are at least 149 cases in the u.s. and the death toll stands at 11. in washington state, the number of confirmed cases jump from 39 to 70 yesterday. about 2500 people remain quarantined on a cruise ship off san francisco after a passenger on the previous voyage died from the virus. at this is "outnumbered," and i'm melissa francis. here's today is harris faulkner,
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fox news contributor, rachel campos-duffy. fox news contributor, rachel campos-duffy. and in the center seat -- he is outnumbered. i'm going to bring it out to the couch to discuss all this in just a moment. but first let's go to jonathan who is live in atlanta outside of cdc headquarters. jonathan. >> high, melissa. the president will be visiting cdc's main camp in atlanta, which you see them behind me. overnight, just briefly, it appeared that his visit was in jeopardy. for a while there was concerned that the coronavirus outbreak might have affected the very agency tasked with stopping it. it turned out to be a false alarm. take a listen. it's because they thought there was a problem at cdc, someone there had the virus. it turned out negative so we will see what we can do.
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>> the president is closely monitoring the situation on board the grand princess, the cruise ship that's been staying out at sea off the course of california until passengers can be fully tested for the virus with cats that were flown in on a military helicopter. state and federal health officials became concerned when a 71-year-old man with pre-existing health conditions died shortly after returning to california from a previous cruise. nearly 3500 passengers and crew remain on board. >> a total of 35 have shown flu-like symptoms during the course of this 15 day cruise. many of those people have recovered and are no longer showing flu-like symptoms. >> it remains unclear where the ship will dock. san francisco health authorities say that once they assess the situation on board the ship they will find a suitable place that can adequately care for the passengers on the ship while
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also protecting the safety of the general public. melissa, back to you. >> jonathan, thank you so much. i want to bring it out to the couch. pete, i don't want to downplay the seriousness of this. i think karis and i have been a good balance on this. they governor of new york -- this struck me. he said to new york that the facts do not warrant the level of anxiety that we have seen. i know we have to be on guard about this and we want to be really serious. the anxiety has gone throug thre roof. >> it has. i think at the moment we should step back and strip away the hyperbole. in cable news we talk in stark, drastic terms. the voices we need to be listening to right now are the experts, the people who understand the nature of a virus like this, how it spreads, and reflect on whether or not we pursue the right policies here in our country to keep the citizenry safe. so far it appears the president has been ahead of the scar event taking it seriously and has been listening to those very experts.
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i think a pause and some burdens is right where we nee need to b. >> very early on with the eskimo in the markets were starting to react, kellyanne conway of the white house advisory group was with me and as those numbers were following, i made a conscious effort to say out loud, lets at the politics aside now and she and i went through what was going on with those numbers without all of that. that's also another place we need to be right now. people are so used to seeing us argue. they are so used to turning and seeing the panels with those whose eyes and everything else. this only has one side, it's called survival. just getting to the facts and taking the politics out of it for everybody, both sides, and everybody between and outside local politics it's very important. to speak up each you said something important. it seems like there is a plan in place. the president addressed that in his town hall.
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let's listen. >> we could have a very long term plan. we hope that doesn't happen. we have plans for every single possibility. i think that's what we have to do. we hope it doesn't last too long. >> jessica, do you have confidence enough? >> i have confidence in the public health officials like dr. faust he can move i would like to see as much of him as possible. i want him on the sunday shows talk about what's going on. so what he who has dealt with pandemics before it has served the country for decades. when i hear from doctors, i have confidence in that. we were talking but this a couple of days on the couch that said we do not have enough testing kits. i don't know if you guys saw the release from the governor of missouri yesterday that set up to 40 people have been tested and we have some were less than 17 cases. what does that mean? 40 tests across an entire state does not sound that good to me. we need more. they were just airlifted in, but we are behind the curve on testing for sure. >> wonderful that the president freed up the free market to work
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on night and we have private companies that are going out there and making tasks as quickly as they can do >> if you get $3.8 billion out and you don't have a strong pharma industry -- it gets a bad rap in the country but our people know what to do without. we have a great pharmaceutical industry. we can come up with a vaccine treatment. i do feel confident and the president gave me confidence because he has good instincts. his first instinct was to stop the fight in from china. that is done a lot to mitigate some of the deaths. i feel like it's overblown. we should all be washing our hands. i have a lot of little kids and i making them wash their hands even more. pete, you have to wash your hands. that's the wa way to go. >> let's look at the market because they were selling out today amid fears of the coronavirus and economic impact. let's see where the dow is right now. unfortunately it is blocked. there is good news in the february jobs number.
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273,000 jobs created. better than expected but with manufacturing in china disrupted, companies here are now starting to. the effect in their supply chain. harris, this is another interesting one because we are staying on top of the sub fox business. larry kudlow out this morning. he was on with stuart bernie. he was my coanchor for a long time. i know very well how much he believes in pro-growth economics. when he talks about targeted things that washington can do in terms of injections of small business loans. he was out this morning and talking to blake furman. he does for sure understand how to get in and do something to support the industries that are struggling. >> what i appreciate from larry kudlow and others in the industry is the fact that nothing is a quick fix. we are in this together and
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there are some definite steps. that can get the market some confidence. what we have also seen that can give the market some confidences when we get the most information from those medical officials. when you see a news conference where the president and vice president, who is put on task to lead. when you see vice president mike pence up there with those people come i think you mentioned him. that gives the market some confidence because it's that unpredictability that you always talk about, melissa, that drives investors to go wild take advantage of opportunity and a way to take go into the shadows and run when i think it might not be there. >> here's what the president set up of the viruses impact on the economy. bigelow, we were set to hit 30,000 on the dial. this is a number that nobody ever came close to. already we have the numbered. even though it's down ten or 11% committed still high steph it's ever been by far. it certainly might have an
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impact -- >> what you think? >> it will have an impact. you look at the jobs number the came out this morning. almost a hundred thousand more than expected. that's gangbusters. that's a reinforcement of the baseline of our economy is very strong. if there is one silver lining to what we have seen with the coronavirus, it's exposing how vulnerable we can be if we are too dependent on supply chains from countries that ultimately seek our destruction. john is not our friend. if you are reliant on them in tough times come you create a real formal ability. the president talked about that in a lot of different ways for a long time. here's a case worth laid bare in front of you. >> including some of our medicines that we need. i do think it's interesting. china is under a lot of pressure to perform well under this because if i was a company and i had a factory over there, and i have an opportunity to go to vietnam or some of the place many might beat us close, less secretive about what's happening and their country and can handle this kind of situation.
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maybe this might actually speed up what donald trump's long-term plan, which has been quick to wean us off of turn over the long run. >> jessica? >> i think that would definitely be a good thing. i was talking with neil cavuto about the implicit problem with disease like is originating in a place that never tells the truth. we have no idea what's actually going on there. someone who said this is coming into serious sickness is going to be international. i want to return to what i was saying in the first part of this but having as many medical experts out there as possible. i do think the president does himself and his administration when he calls into hannity and says you can still go to work, or when he goes and gives out numbers that are messiah that are accurate and mr. under the person who died the first death in washington for instance, the president i don't think has the grounding and the facts. >> why is he --
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>> you know the came from the cdc. >> i'm just saying -- >> if you want to make it about that. they had confirmed the wrong -- >> i want to make it about the fact that the president has an accurately represented many about the coronavirus and what is happened. whether that instance from the cdc or the nih. >> it's much faster. >> he also said that she try to blame the obama administration obama administration and secretary azar had to come out and say there is nothing that happened under the obama administration that is impact of this. the president is not a doctor. i understand he is the leader of the free world, but let the doctors talk about this. >> i think we started in a place where he said let's not make this about politics. >> i did. i know it's hard because reflexively that's where people
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go. we are in an election year. it takes all of us to do that, not just the lawmakers. >> president obama had saying a ball that was no big deal, i would criticize him and we should all criticize him for that. >> more followed after chuck schumer appeared to threaten conservative supreme court justices. president trump's reaction. hours after dropping out, elizabeth warren calls out bernie sanders about his most outspoken supporters. with va mortgage rates near record lows, i want to tell as many veterans as possible about newday's va streamline refi. it's the closest thing to automatic savings that we've ever offered. at newday, veterans can refinance their mortgage with no income verification, no appraisal and no out of pocket expenses. and we've extended our call center hours so that every veteran can take advantage
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of these near record low rates.
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>> elizabeth worden is taking some parting shots after
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dropping out of the presidential race yesterday. you saw it live here on "outnumbered." she's taking fellow progressive, bernie sanders, to task over some of his followers, bernie brose, as they are known for their competitive online. >> it's not just about me. i have a real problem with this online bullying and organized nastiness. i'm not just talking about who said mean things. i'm talking about some really ugly stuff that went on. >> you know, pete, in this world of finding safe places, online social media might not be one of them. does she have a point? >> politics is a nasty business. she's in the middle of a primary running against someone occupying the same space as her. she is the less authentic of the two, both of which have crazy ideas. she's angry that she didn't wane entities looking the point
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fingers. maybe it was sexist, she would need to point those fingers at fellow emma krause who are sexist and didn't want to choose her. the reason she's hesitating on an endorsement in my mind is that she hasn't authentic like bernie and would be willing to be seduced by a joe biden if he is the front runner. i think it could go either way. >> you and i agree and the fact that that is not off the table. if she plays a realm of i'm gonna take one for the team she's got a future going down that lane. what do you think i'm a jessica? >> i think she's more likely to endorse joe biden then bernie sanders hands down. that's not because she's an authentic, she knows who her supporters are. her bases split between ideologically aligned with bernie sanders folks who are more working class, and white-collar educated women come up my target demographic, who were hillary supporters and who is choices were joe, pete, and amy.
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she has to contend with that. the point she's making about the bernie bros is very serious and legitimate. every campaign admit that they are the most vitriolic, the most aggressive. you remember the whole campaign when she said bernie said a woman can't win. they went after her supporters. they are still trying to bully her. >> listen, this topic has been very personal for me in the last week. the bullies are on the left. my daughter participated at our university and i get out the vote thing where she held up the signs and told why they would vote. she wrote i'm voting because coronavirus isn't going to destroy america come about socialism well. she had death threats, they attacked her looks, her family, it was absolutely vicious. it was unbelievable. this was the university of chicago. the university did nothing, my point is the left does have a problem with this.
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good for elizabeth warren for saying it but let's see if she actually does something because that's where it's coming from. >> what's interesting -- the president talked about this at the town hall on fox. it may not have just been with her talking about these things -- she thinks she didn't exit soon enough. >> if she's a true progressive, which probably she is, she should have dropped out three days ago. it would've been a whole different race. bernie sanders would've won five or six or seven states. would've won minnesota, would've won at least another two or three states. when you look at it, she did him no favors. >> i don't know if that is true because i don't know how many votes would've really gone in which -- we don't know how those people would've voted. i think he is stoking the flames there. which is smart to do. any sort of bickering on the other side is politics at that point. meanwhile, elizabeth warren's exit leaves female supporters
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leading the fact that what was one of the most diverse field ever it is now two white men and tulsi gabbard. she's way back in the pack with the two delegates she won on super tuesday. was last seen on the debate stage in november. the most powerful woman in government, nancy pelosi, and thinks she knows what's behind this. >> every time i get introduced as the most powerful woman, i almost cried because i'm like i wish that were not true. i so wish that we had a woman president of the united states, and we came very close to doing that. i do think there is a certain element of misogyny. >> i don't know about that. what do you think? do you think what these candidates -- is about gender? is america not ready? >> that's a generational divide. as a woman i don't ever think to you, i really wish we had a female president. i think i hope we have a great president who can get our
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economy going and protect us from enemies abroad. i think that's a generational thing. these boomer moms or grandmas i think it's really important for them in that way. i don't see gender in that way. maybe i'm the outlier, but it doesn't matter to me. i'm looking for competence. i wonder, jessica, because for example i think michelle obama could win the election today. i think a lot of women who could win today. i know there is still gender bias out there, clearly. with these candidates, it's sort of like i don't know -- when you talk about likability. tulsi gabbard, in my mind, is likable. i don't know. where'd you come down on this question marks because a democrat i don't find tulsi gabbard likable. the majority of us don't. she seems like a very nice person -- >> that's not a very nice person when you are talking about likability. >> i think when you do the analysis of how cable news and
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tv punditry has worked and articles that have been written, there will be more gendered language used when talking about women, questions of electability referring to gender, which is a curious factor in the spirit comments about how somebody looks, how their voice sounds, how they present. amy klobuchar, for instance, hired a new stylist in the middle of the primary campaign. hillary clinton's old stylist. to look more presidential. >> smart move. >> do you know bernie has a stylus? >> it's interesting you bring up the bernie issue. bernie sanders is usually popular and everybody talks about how unlikable he is. he's on top of the world right now. what's different then 2016 -- and i'm going to talk to you peter, we only had one woman running in 2016. people could make the argument we wanted a woman to come i just wasn't her. we had a hole punched out. you had a lot to choose from. distinct personalities and backgrounds. >> nobody said margaret thatcher
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was likable either. people are more than prepared -- if there's one thing americans are prepared to do its vote for a female president. no doubt about that. you find the right person with the right set of ideas and leadership style, it's over. it becomes an advantage. just like people were ready to vote for the first black president. that was a moment they were enthused to be a part of. i just haven't found the right candidate. i think it will be a republic in the first time it happens. >> i can tell you from talking with women on the hail, lawmakers on the hail who were currently serving on how hard the road is to get there for women. people like virginia foxx, who's been there a long time. republican scholar. people like a val demings and others who you look at us strong women. it's tough with women still in those local levels to run because it's hard for them to fund raise. let me finish. i didn't just name republicans.
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it is and that they don't get the support. the fund-raising isn't there. the understanding that it is a little bit more of a struggle. i don't know why all of that is. i don't know if it is an inherent bias. i don't know if the infrastructure isn't set up for some of the issues. i'm not certain because i've never run. i can tell you from talking to people who have been successful and unsuccessful at it, very smart women, that the struggle is real. as you go up the echelon, it should be easier because there shouldn't be so many more of us they are. that's what i hear from nancy pelosi. >> the pendulum has swung. somebody like nancy pelosi is proof. they are the trailblazers who have had to fight. >> let's have more women in the length race. >> i disagree -- i think the parties are both wanting to recruit minorities and -- >> let's see how it plays out. >> ironed we electing them.
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>> the same reason why they're not in the debate right now. president trump now weighing in on top senate mccright chuck schumer's fiery warning to the presidents to supreme court nominees. the political and legal fallout is next. ♪ it may lead to a world of possibilities. entresto is a heart failure medicine prescribed by most cardiologists. it was proven superior at helping people stay alive and out of the hospital. heart failure can change the structure of your heart, so it may not work as well. entresto helps improve your heart's ability to pump blood to the body. and with a healthier heart, there's no telling where life may take you. don't take entresto if pregnant; it can cause harm or death to an unborn baby. don't take entresto with an ace inhibitor or aliskiren, or if you've had angioedema with an ace or arb. the most serious side effects are angioedema,
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>> they are taking away fundamental rights. i want to tell you, you have released the whirlwind and you will pay the price. you won't know what hit you. >> the fallout continues for senate minority leader, chip chuck schumer, after he seem to threaten
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neil gorsuch the storm is coming hard to believe until people tell their stories. it happened that one of the morning. over and over we've been hearing survivor stories. amanda grabbed his son, ran to the closet, and held on. other people being lifted out of their houses and thrown. this was an enormously powerful storm. a deadly storm. there's a community now in wreckage and trauma. the president on the ground trying to be a morale booster as well as to make sure the 80 people need is coming in. because we were looking at these
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pictures live in listening to you fellas what's happening days later we seen the ductal rise. we know the heroic rescues and all the situations that are happening for the first responders. it can take its toll. what subs do you get that they have reached a point where those numbers won't change. >> i think the numbers will change. we have 24 and that's pretty stable. the last person was a 6-year-old boy. keep in mind that some of the heartbreaking tragedy. of the 18 people, five were under 14. it was very difficult not only physical work going around the clock but emotionally. i spoke to one bobcat driver who said he recovered five different bodies. that was a real trauma on him. real difficult efforts.
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when you mention first responders, keep in mind that even before the first responders god here these were friends and neighbors that came first responders. he ran out in his socks to try and bang on doors and help people. people were in the streets. this sucked people out of their houses. neighbor helping neighbor helping neighbor. >> we're watching the president of the united states on the ground as he is with survivors of the horrific weather that hit tennessee earlier this week. steve harrigan reporting from the ground telling us what it is like to be witnessing all of this. this is the most intense storm. i was just reading about -- they readjusted the scale to account for some of the power of the storms. this is one of those powerful in three years. less listen to the president. >> it was 50 miles long, which is extraordinarily long. a very wide one.
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we sought from the helicopter very well. just wanted to thank you very much for the great job you're doing. >> we are very grateful that you're here in tennessee and grateful for your support. we had immediate response from fema. you gave emergency disaster declaration, which will be very helpful to the families in this community and all across tennessee who have suffered a great loss. it's been a painful, tragic week for our state. tennessee is hopeful. god has used volunteers to bring hope all across our state. your presence here reminds us that people all across the country care about what's happening here. we are grateful, thank you. >> we appreciate you being here.
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you called the other night and expressed your sorrow. now you've shown up. the first time a sitting president is ever been in our city and county. it shows hope and passion to our community and our residents. we appreciate that very much. >> we live in a great community, it's been a devastation. loss of life like our county has never seen in its history. the outpouring of love and support from our community and first responders -- we have a great group of folks. it's been an outstanding response those folks and from the community. all of the love and support. come here today puts a big asterisk on the end of that and shows the cooperation we've had from the federal government and the state government has been absolutely amazing. we have never seen it before. i've been in emergency services for 35 years before county
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mayor. we've never seen the cooperation of response that we seen from your administration. thank you. your instant declaration for our community. >speak with the people. what is the final count of death in the state itself? >> 25 tennesseans lost their lives in this. many injured. thousands without homes and power and supplies. tennesseans have shown up, we are the volunteer stage. they've shown up by the thousands to surround our neighbors and provide hope and provide assistance. it's been inspiring. we are going to overcome. the state knows how to do it. that's who we are and that's what we do. government can do so much, but only the people can provide hope they're doing just just that intimacy. >> were going to see -- this is
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a swath that went through. obviously people in these homes. for the most part they've been killed. it just appeared. thank you very much. do you have any questions? >> i do have a message for the families for those who lost their lives. we love them. their special people. it's an incredible place in an incredible state. takes place a little hours ago.
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they are already rebuilding. we were flying over -- you see the blue roofs going up that's all over the place. great people, it's a great sta state. they have great leadership in this state and that's why it's working out like it is. still 25 people at least. some really badly hurt. very badly hurt. the mayor was telling me some of the houses came down. they got here right after that happened. >> it's a war zone. the running when everybody else is running out. they ran in and took care of these folks. police, fire, ems. it's an amazing night. we have people that are so disoriented they were walking
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through the woods on the field trying to get to safety and figure out where they could go. our great group of responders took care of them immediately. because they didn't know what happened. all of a sudden they are watching television or something -- all of a sudden they are outside walking on the street. there was an young boy taken out of the house. >> one minute ease in this house, the next minute he's laying in his yard. it happened a couple of blocks away. another family -- the husband huddled over the wife and child in the roof came off and he was sucked out of fear they were all sucked out into the yard, they survived. it's important to know that here in cookeville county, while there was 25 deaths in the state, 18 of them were right here in our city and county. eight of them on this particular street. we can continue to ask for prayers for our community and these families that are going to be burying people over the next
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week. >> thank you very much. we are doing it now. i think were also going to stop at the church where there are a lot of people huddled up in the church. it's a cold day. they are all huddled up. we are going to go to the church. also we are seeing some of the people over here. we are looking at different options, different options. we did get a tremendous job numbers this morning. if you add the 80,000 to the 270,000, we are talking in the 350,000 range. right now that's not something we want to be talking about. thank you.
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very quickly, almost momentarily, i dated. the governor called me, we had calls from a lot of people. that was an immediate emergency. we spoke and we approved it within minutes of the call. >> do you know about how much? >> to be determined. what they need. were going to take care of what they need. >> we will be doing assessments and let helps determine what the numbers will be. the way it works is as we determine the amount, that's how the numbers will be assessed and that's with the assistance will be. >> much of that money is to help the people that god wiped out. well, i love them. i loved him very much.
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that's why i am here. some people wouldn't be here. there was no way i wasn't going to stop here first. i was going to do it yesterday but they asked me for one more day because they were looking for -- they were looking for bodies up until just now. now they been much covered everything. god to be with them. we are going to be with them. we are going to be with them all the way. i can tell you the governor feels the same as i do. the mayor, i want to congratulate you and the job they've done. they haven't slept in 48 hours, neither have you come to think of it. we are going to see the people now and say hello to them and do whatever you can do. a lot of them have lost people within the family. one family got entirely wiped out. there was one case though i heard a young man was -- an 8-year-old boy was ripped out, flown to a certain area, and
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dropped off at the street two or three blocks away, and they found him walking. he said i just flew in the air and he was walking down the street two blocks away from his home. how did his family do? they were deceased? it took him, he said i was carried by the air away from my house. because of the house there, he was dropped at the neighbors. >> and his parents were killed. and the sister. were going to go see some of the folks. figure the president of the united states with the governor there of tennessee, bill lee, who was on the president's left. they are walking through a neighborhood that saw just
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unimaginable damage from the twister that sat for nearly 10 minutes as it moved along in that state on the ground. they are on a street where eight people died. of the 18 who perished in cookeville, tennessee, which took the biggest. we learn to 25 are dead across the state. this is putnam county. as we watch the president now talking with people who survived and talking with officials on the ground, we are reminded of the fragility of life. we are reminded that it is a chilly day there and a new day has dawned, and it is not abroad clarity on what will come next. they are gathering at a nearby church. the president says it's cold on the ground today. they're going to gather and huddled together and talk about the future and what that looks like. we will come onto the couch. winds of 200 miles per hour,
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they are estimating it just this storm, a hundred homes destroyed. we haven't talked about other structures and businesses, but just the homes. of those who perished, at five were under the age of 13. so we have been hearing about this, but with the president on the ground, melissa, we are seeing firsthand the grief that they will deal with and the coming days as they begin to say goodbye to those beloved ones that they have lost. >> he talks about that there are thousands of homes destroyed or without power. the governor they are talking about they called and asked for help. president is saying within minutes of the call they released funds for disaster relief. they said how much he said whatever they need. in times like this you talk about having the president on the ground and the security that you need in that situation it is
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it a distraction or is it worth it? the president said he is there because he loves these people. you have to think that in a time like this, he is a good comforter in chief. that's one of the things like community is broken, but they are also heartbroken. you want to know that your leader cares. >> is where watching the screen right now we see the president of the united states walking with government officials. i mentioned earlier governor bill lee -- his wife is there. ricky cheryl flynn, who was the mayor of cookeville, was speaking earlier as they held an impromptu news conference. he said he's been in emergency management for 35 years. this is the worst that he has ever seen. i mentioned also that this is the most intense storm as we have seen in this state in about three years. >> i think the president said it right. what can you say in this moment
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of such deep grief, which you as you said so well, such reminder of the fragility of human nature. of life on earth. you pray to our creator and you hug the ones that you love a little closer and you do everything you can on the ground to help these people who have suffered an unspeakable tragedy. for him to go there is a part of that comfort. >> as we take a break i want you to take a look at your screen and look at the center of your screen. this is what we do, as human beings, as americans in this country, we come together. the president was talking about walking to the next venue for them to take a look at it and were going to meet at a church. he's walking through this neighborhood. in cookeville they have stopped. they are talking as he speaks with survivors and those lost loved ones in the twister that had cookeville, tennessee, putnam county recovering. stay tuned.
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at an unbeatable value. get the xfi gateway and download the xfi app today. >> i believe they really want to make a deal. going very close to 20 years, they are also tired of fighting, believe it or not. >> president trump sounding optimistic about the peace
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agreement the u.s. signed with alabama last week's laying out plans for the potential withdrawal of u.s. troops from afghanistan pending further talks but since the signing and surge in violence this week, wednesday u.s. military air strike targeting taliban forces after they attacked an afghan military checkpoint. this morning, secretary of state mike pompeo joined pete hegseth on the fox and friends couch to discuss the way forward. we met we are committed to having the afghan government and people get to the negotiating table for the first time. a president trump is also made clear that two years from now or five years from now, there's a threat to the united states of america, we will come right back at it. >> did you feel like you learn something? >> there is no fantasy that peace is truly going to break out. what the focus is as american interests and making sure that we are not investing somewhere but we haven't gotten the retu
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return. the ball is in afghanistan's court. they want to take over the afghan government. using it as somewhere to attack us. so you don't want to make peace with an enemy has been killing americans for the last two decades. at the same time at some point, you say if you can't do it now after all this money and all this training, than that is your fault. >> i don't think you can disagree if you could had to wait-and-see situation and now there is bipartisan agreement that we shouldn't be in this and then we got into that part of the world for the wrong reasons i'm going on that intelligence. >> that's part of the road for the right reasons, afghanistan to protect. >> iraq definitely the wrong reasons, afghanistan more right
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reasons but it has gone on too long. it is disconcerting that within 24 hours of the peace deal when they were violating it already. so we can get out of the region. in >> i'm interested to see what you said about this administration going into this as realists, not everything is going to be unicorns and rainbows. i love that donald trump is keeping his promise, he said he was going to do on the campaign and he's doing it. what i really like is for the left in the right can come together around something which is this idea of having all these wars abroad that don't actually benefit us, that we should be very clear about why we are in other countries and how we are spending our money and how we are spending our treasure. i love it, i think the democrats should come forward a little bit more and give more credit for this because this is a democrat issue.
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>> aren't there more things we can come together on if there is this, criminal justice reform. >> this moment will be tested because it's going to get worse on the ground before it gets better. the taliban wants to take control, the afghan government is weak, the afghan military is very fractured and if we pulled back, that's all going to be strained so the question is how do we maintain a presence enough to kill terrorists while also saying this is an afghan probl problem. >> what donald trump has done because of the kind of figure he is is drag the republican party over a little bit more over to that side which is a good thing. i >> pete hegseth has a new book coming out in american crusade, our fight to stay free. pete explores whether the election of president trump was a sign of a national rebirth or the last act of a nation not surrendered to leftists who demand socialism, globalism, and
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politically correct elitism. in you can reserve your copy now. >> there's a whole section on though so i brought a copy for rachel, she already knows. this one is for jessica. you are my favorite globalist elite. i have one for you, sorry. >> she's already given up on this. >> the argument is if you can win at the ballot box and president trump did in 2016 and hopefully does again in 2020 but if you don't win back your educational institutions and your culture, then you lose the fertile soil in which the citizens of america are required to keep us free. politics is one thing, you've got to have the full spectrum fight and it is so big and so important that the word crusade, a holy war of the righteous cause of freedom is the right one in this particular case.
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>> we are back here at monday noon eastern, "outnumbered" over time right now. >> harris: we begin with is fox news alert and we have been showing you president trump visiting tennessee hit hard by twisters surveying the damage from this week's devastating tornadoes. you are watching "outnumbered" over time, i'm harris faulkner. 25 people confirmed dead after tornadoes ripped through outside of nashville about 80 miles, putnam county, president trump meeting with victims and officials they are and just moments ago, here's what he sa said. >> i have a message for the families of those that lost their lives. we love them, they were special people, it's an incredible place in an incredible state. a tremendous heart. >> harris: saw the

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