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tv   FOX and Friends Saturday  FOX News  March 7, 2020 3:00am-7:00am PST

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♪ hold me close, never let me go. ♪ keep the feeling alive, make me lose control. >> baby, baby. [ laughter ] >> welcome in to saturday morning. jen's ready to go. chris and i will ease into it. is this your song. >> of course. this is the kind of music when you're in california, you put the top down and sing it long, you just feel it. you've got to feel the music. >> is it 1980? >> yeah, in my mind. i live in the back to the future
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movie. >> i was in california, i should have given it a try. >> you're a surfer, you should embrace this kind of music. >> 3 the democratic nominations back when it started when biden was the presumptive nominee. >> all that time and we're back where we were. we're glad you're here. we play dj on the weekends. that was jen's pick. stay tuned for griff's. you're going to love it. >> and yours. >> i don't know that i sent one in. there's got to be one in the backlog for me. >> we've got big stories this morning. the president m mar-a-lago this weekend after two high profile trips. >> this first stop in tennessee touring communities devastated by tornadoes. >> the president headed to the cdc headquarters in atlanta to discuss the coronavirus outbreak. aishah hasnie joins us live as the number of cases surges across the u.s. >> reporter: several states
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reporting their first cases, including the nation's capital. in cal california, thousands of people are struck on a crews cre liner. the grand princess cruise ship has been circling in international waters, forbiden to dock in san francisco after a passenger from a previous trip died from the coronavirus. 21 people on board are carrying the virus, 19 are crew members, two are passengers. authorities are working to dock the ship at a noncommercial port this weekend. they want to test all 3500 people on-board and possibly even put them in quarantine. while visiting the cdc on friday, president trump said he preferred not to allow those passengers onto american soil but he will accept whatever medical experts decide. >> frankly, if it were up to me, i would be inclined to say leave everybody on the ship for a period of time and use the ship
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as your base. but a lot of people would rather do it a different way, they would rather quarantine people. when they do that, our numbers are going to go up, they're mostly americans and we have to take care of americans. >> reporter: the president praised the response to the outbreak as he signed an $8.3 billion bipartisan spending bill to fight the virus and fund research for a vaccine and that can't come soon enough, as the number of american deaths now climbs to 16 this morning, more than 200 cases scattered across the country. indiana, pennsylvania, minnesota and nebraska all reporting their first cases. pete, jed, give. >>griff.>> thank you, aishah. the idea of getting on a cruise ship right now, it doesn't feel like the time. >> scary stuff. >> right? i'm not -- i don't have a big, as you guys know, concern about germs and all of that. >> you don't say. >> but right now it seems
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prudent to sort of step away from that for a second, maybe the cruise ships won't like hearing that, but and -- then you've got to take precautions necessary with people that are on them and say right now we want to maintain, keep our people as safe as possible. >> also the warnings that have been going out from doctors, saying if you can avoid crowded places, congested areas. a cruise ship, that fits that description. >> we'll talk more about that story. there are other stories too. the devastation in my home state of tennessee, unbelievable. >> another story we're following, president trump sending a message of support and compassion while visiting tornado-ravaged communities in tennessee. >> we love them. they're special people. it's an incredible place, incredible state, tremendous heart. you see people rebuilding already. >> the president praising the state's quick response to the destruction. at least 25 people were killed after several tornadoes tore through the state without warning, the president walking
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through a church filled with relief supplies, shaking hands with survivors. >> nashville's biggest stars helping rebuild the city. john rich held a benefit concert. he will tell us about it later this hour. >> that is a resilient town and the music goes on. we remember everybody there. watching that press conference live yesterday, you can feel the gravity. it's like there's not a lot you can do in that moment except be there for those people, which the president was. >> it's the volunteer state. it's what they do, come out and take care of their own, cookville, 50 miles east of nashville. they'll show what they're made of, the grit of tennesseans. >> no one is exempt from tragedies that happen as a result of tornadoes, hurricanes. when you see a community that comes together like that and what the country music community has done there, it's inspiring
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for people around the country, that this is the way you pull through it. so kudos for doing that. >> we've got additional news as well. a big one, actually, in the world of politics. i got a ding on my phone at -- >> 8:00. >> 8:00 last night, mick mulvaney is now the former chief of staff. he is out. and in is mark meadows, the former chairman of the freedom caucus. the president announced it with a tweet. he said i'm pleased to announce that congressman mark meadows will become white house chief of staff. i've long known and worked with marknd the relationship is a very good one. i want to thank acting chief mulvaney for having served the administration so well. he will become the special envoy for northern ireland. thank you. griff, you know all the players there in washington, d.c. what do you make of this. >> let me show you mark meadow's statement. he says this. this president, his administration have a long list
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of incredible victories they delivered to the country during the first term with the best yet to come and i look forward to building on that success and staying in the fight for the forgotten men and women of america. i think that's significant. mark meadows has a lot of respect on capitol hill. his best friend is the late elijah cummings. he worked across the aisle. he opposed the president when the president wanted to take on the affordable care act and get rid of it. then he became the president's most fierce defender during the impeachment. mark meadows comes with a tremendous amount of currency on capitol hill and a lot of respect and i think that should president trump win re-election for the next four years, he will be positioned perfectly to try and get something to work with pelosi, who may or may not still be in power and chuck schumer, to move the country forward. >> that's one thing i saw on social media with this announcement. usually you see on social media everyone is reacting to picks. people on both sides of the
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aisle, democrat and republican, to your point were praising this pick. one of those people was representative jim jordan, who tweeted mark meadows is smart, loyal, a true patriot, a good man and my best friend, couldn't have picked anyone better for the job. with politics being so divisive, i think it's refreshing for people to see someone that has worked with on both sides of the aisle. >> jim jordan would tack issue with the fact --would take issue with the fact that elijah cummings is his best friend. previous chiefs of staffs have tried to intil instill order tht doesn't fit with this patient. mick mulvaney allowed trump to be trump. there were a few riffs there. mark meadows is the next phase, the confidence post the impeachment nonsense, closing ranks with people you know are loyal to the president and the president's agenda, a hyper
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confident guy who gets what the president is talking about and wants to advance it. if you're the president, you want those types of people around you right now and having known march meadows a little bit, he's a quality guy and the white house made a great pick. >> tremendous leader. i've got to bring one story back into the fold. i was looking at what the dnc did in changing the debate rules, yet again, against tulsi gabbard. >> to make sure bloomberg could get in, they changed them now. >> they made a change this week. it was little noticed. let me show you the actual language. the dnc says to qualify for this upcoming a arizona debate, to mt the delegate threshold, candidates must have been allocated at least 20% of the total number of pledged delegates that we've had so far. let me show you the total delegate count. there it is, biden, 664,
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sanders, 573, gabbard, 2. the chance of her getting 20% are zero. tulsi gabbard was the number two person in 2016 at the dnc. she then endorsed bernie sanders, hillary clinton waged war against her. now it seems that the dnc's getting a final say against her by making sure there's zero chance she's on the stage and to her credit, she's upset. >> she's upset. when you look at the numbers, there is no path for victory for her here. should she be allowed to get on stage and say her peace? even though she didn't have a path to victory, she could keep the other candidates on their game and make that a more interesting dynamic between joe biden and bernie sanders. because she does have a way of holding candidates accountable in a way that oftentimes those two don't have of holding each other accountable. tulsi was upset about this, she did tweet saying joe biden, bernie sanders, i'm sure you would agree our democratic nominee should be a person who
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will stand up for what is right. i ask that you have the courage to do that now in the face of the effort to keep me from participating in the debates. >> if you're going to play by the democrats' rules, they're locblocking a woman and a minory and a veteran. that's who they're blocking from the debate stage. but if you've got two delegates, what does she have two, why are you in? there is no rational for her candidacy. if i were the dnc, i would probably do the same thing. it is hypocrite call, considering what they did for michael bloomberg because he's got a lot of this. >> plus a lot of us are ready for the duke-out. >> they don't want the distraction. she would own that stage in a weird way. >> she would. if someone is owning the stage that can't win and you're paying attention to her and you've got to be paying attention to these two, so -- i get the point, change the rules up last minute, sneaky stuff going on there. >> overnight, police found remains believed to be a missing
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tennessee toddler. investigators making the discovery at a property belonging to a family member of evelyn's mother, meggan. evelyn's mother, grandmother and grandmother's boyfriend were arrested in connection to her disappearance. and the trump administration is p sending more u.s. troops to the southern border. about 160 troops will head to two locations in cal californiad texas to help border agents. the move comes amid fears of a new migration crisis as the supreme court decides whether the white house can force asylum seekers to stay in mexico while waiting to face a judge. the administration worries migrants could flood the u.s. southern border if the remain in mexico policy is blocked. >> u.s. border agents will take dna samples from illegal immigrants, enforcing a law that requires taking samples from any detained person, including non-u.s. citizens. dhs under president obama asked
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for an exemption from the law, saying it didn't have the man power to get dna samples. the trump administration says the process is now easier and cheaper. nascar driver ryan newman taking his first trip to a racetrack after his shocking crash at the daytona 500. newman speaking briefly after watching his teammates race in phoenix. >> it's great to be alive. still looking at my car. it's a miracle. >> newman is being treated for a head injury. he said it's unclear when he will race again. thinking that the dna test, who has -- i'm trying to think who might have my dna. i think only the army. does anyone have your dna. >> and the my heritage people. >> oh, they have it. you guys, any clue? >> no. >> you guys are free and clear, they can't track you down. >> still ahead, the february jobs report crushes expectations. bernie sanders refuses to give credit where credit is due. >> trump thinks that he created low unemployment all by himself.
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obama worked very hard and we worked with him. >> but is that fair? business professor brian brenberg, friend of the show, coming up next. ♪ and whatever this was. oscar mayer is found in more fridges than anyone else, because it's the taste you count on. make every sandwich count. welcome to portabella's. thisfor some scampi bites.eady wait a sec i feel like i know you? oh! have you dined with us before? no, you're -- you're that insurance guy, aren't you? the pasty one? oh, yeah. as if! like i'm gonna go into some spiel about how you can get options based on your budget with the name your price tool.
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a major win for president trump, the february jobs report crushing expectations with 272,000 jobs added and unemployment falling back to 50-year record low, 3.5%. but bernie sanders doesn't want to give credit where it's due. watch. >> presiden president barack obs is -- >> trump thinks he created low unemployment all by himself. obama worked very hard and we worked with him, to try to rebuild the american economy. and year after year, it has
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gotten better. >> bernie's bear-hugging barack right now. here to discuss, professor of economics, brian brenberg. we're arguing about who gets credit. break that down as well. also these numbers, what do they mean. >> the numbers, these are important numbers. you're probably hearing a lot of people saying, well, this is a big job number in february but it's backward-looking. that's not true. this tells us about the cushion that we're bringing into this coronavirus situation, how resilient is the economy. when you see jobs numbers like this, you know you have resiliency in the economy. the second piece is, with this tight of a labor market, employers are likely to be reluctant to lay employees off in the midst of this. they know it's going to be hard to rehire if you see the economy bounce back and so you have the resiliency piece, you also have the piece of do i want to lay
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off employees during this time if we do bounce back, i want to make sure i have those workers available. >> maybe we take a hit in the short term. >> you don't know. you've got to think about how an employer calculates this. they don't want to make any rash moves. everybody is waiting and seeing right now. with strong job numbers, you see some sense that the bounceback could be bigger than some have predicted. >> bernie says the cushion we have right now is because of barack obama. what do you say to that? >> look, he talks about working so hard to bring the economy back. it took them about eight years to bring the economy back. much slower than anybody else in the post war recovery periods after recessions. the president has done some things that have just juiced this economy. we know that. it's tax reform, regulatory reform, the unemployment numbers as low as they are, the rebound in manufacturing that we saw much earlier in his term, construction jobs, huge boom in february, same thing in january. look, the president is the
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president. this is the economy he has. he's put policies in place to make this happen. you can talk all you want about what president obama did, the fact is these are numbers we have now and there's very good reason to give the president credit for it. >> not to mention the energy renaissance. if you want to look forward, they said they would destroy it. >> the people who get credit here are american business owners and investors and employers and workers. they've responded to good policies that give them a reason to go back to work, that give them a reason to invest. let's give them credit for it and let's talk about the things we need to do to make sure we can bounce back from coronavirus. i mean, if we react too strongly the wrong way to this, it can harm people. it's not just a health threat. it's a threat to the economy, jobs, wages. the question about does president obama get credit, that is an old conversation, we need to put it to bed. >> thank you very much. now you can go back to bed.
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>> up next, we spring forward with daylight saving tomorrow. kurt the cyber guy makes sure you're ahead of the time change with some tech tips, coming up next.
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time now for quick headlines, a new congressional report is blaming the faa and boeing for the deadly 737 max jet crashes. house investigators faulting boeing's engineering mistakes. the jets are grounded after two deadly crashes in 2018 and 2019. in spacex, successfully launching a rocket overnight. >> three, two, one, zero.
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and liftoff of the falcon 9 rocket and cargo dragon on the final flight of the dragon one spacecraft. >> the rocket taking 4300 pounds of supplies to the international space station. >> that's a lot of supplies. >> it's that time of year again, daylight saving time starts tomorrow. ♪ put your little hand in mine. ♪ there ain't no hill or mountain -- >> and that's the end of that. as we prepare to spring forward, kurt the cyber guy has tips to help you stay ahead of the time change and kurt joins us now. kurt, welcome. >> good to see you. how you doing? >> i'm doing great. how you doing? >> great. i have a feeling that griff is so on this, whoa be the go -- he would be the go-to guy. tonight it happens, so sunday, 2:00 a.m., we lose and hour, we
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set our clocks one hour ahead and you've heard the drill. you hit the smoke detector, you change the battery. i want to add five extra things for you to do that are going to clean up the privacy and suiter in your home as -- and security in your home as relates to the technology that has been added to our smoke detectors over the last few years. on the back, did you know that there have expiration dates. you'll see a manufacture date or expiration date. smoke detectors only last seven to 10 years. after that point, they're only about 70% effective at actually detecting smoke. after 15 years, they only catch half the smoke. you want to swap that out, seven to 10 years. google your smoke detector, it will give you the life of it. seven to 10 years is a good one there. the thing you want to go to next, this lovely thing we call alexa. did you know, now is the moment you want to go to your home
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devices that over the last time we changed our clocks, privacy settings get updaylighted with firmware, things get tweaked. you check it again and go wait a minute, that's not how i left it. today, take the time and go into the alexa app, check your privacy settings and make sure they're set exactly how you like it, which i like to delete all the recordings automatically so that nobody is into your business. it's nothing good about that. your wi-fi router at home, it is sitting there and many cases it's not as secure as we think. simply go find your wi-fi router that's from your cable company or phone company, look at the label, google that, it will tell you how to get into and make sure no strangers are on your router and it's sealed with a fire wall that's turned on. the obvious kind of things. and finally, you know, the big deal, your tv privacy. our smart tvs are more like
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computers, not just displays. you want to find your tv model and get into the settings and check one more time, am i opted out of sharing my third party data with people. are they sending viewing habits, when my family's watching, what we're watching to third parties or anyone else? you have the option to opt out of those and i have put online some of the most popular tvs and device as well as all the steps that you go through. i think you get this all done in 30 minutes today. if you forget today, do it tomorrow for sure. >>.a smoke detector will save yr life. this home technology will save your privacy and security. >> what i missed was when i change the dumb clock on oven or microwave. do i do it in the morning? do i set my alarm for 2:00 a.m. and do it then. >> i already did it. and it's only just because i think i was focused on this story. i said i may as well do this.
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i would do it right now and go out to your dumb car and do your dumb car. if you have a tesla, it happens automatically. >> it does it on your iphone too. i usually wait until the morning. >> the coffee maker, got to do that one. >> i need a special trip to home depot to get a new smoke detector. appreciate that advice. still ahead, the country music community rallying around nashville following this week's deadly string of tornadoes. john rich holding a benefit with some of the music city's biggest stars, we'll take you inside with a live report, coming up. savin' on this! savin' on this! savin' in here. rewarded! learn more at the explorer card dot com.
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and i recently had a heart attack. it changed my life. but i'm a survivor. after my heart attack, my doctor prescribed brilinta. it's for people who have been hospitalized for a heart attack. brilinta is taken with a low-dose aspirin. no more than 100 milligrams as it affects how well brilinta works. brilinta helps keep platelets from sticking together and forming a clot. in a clinical study, brilinta worked better than plavix. brilinta reduced the chance of having another heart attack...
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>> we are back with a fox news alert. president trump visiting tennessee just days after several tornadoes ripped through the state. >> the president vowing full support as people clean up debris from damaged homes an businesses. grady tremble joins us live from nashville with more on the relief efforts. grady, good morning. >> good morning, pete, jed and griff. there's a lot of cleanup to be done in the donaldson neighborhood of nashville, one of the hardest hit areas in the city. president trump flew over the area to get a birds eye view of the damage yesterday morning before starting in cookville, one of the hardest hit areas by the four tornadoes that moved through middle tennessee on tuesday. 18 of the 25 people who passed away were in putnam county. president trump met with victims' family members and
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survivors while he was on the ground in putnam county yesterday. he stopped by a relief shelter to see thousands of dollars of supplies that had been donated from people across the country. he was joined by governor bill lee. listen. >> i have a message for the families of those that lost their lives. we love them. they're special people. it's an incredible place, incredible state, tremendous heart. already you see people rebuilding. >> 25 tennesseans lost their lives in this. people have shown up, we're the volunteer state. they've shown up by the thousands to provide hope and assistance and it's been inspiring. >> >> reporter: and the president's disaster declaration will make much-needed federal money available to the victims here. but the country music stars in the area are also helping out. we caught up with john rich yesterday. he held a benefit concert at his bar in downtown nashville, the
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red neck riviera. >> it's hard to honestly get your arms around it unless you walked in the middle of it. these folks are going to need somewhere to live, they need a car. we thought there's no better time than right now for me to come down here, pack this place out and raise a bunch of money for the cause. >> reporter: and all of the money from last night's benefit will did. >> griff: to the -- will go to the community foundation to help victims and survivors. we have a link to the community foundation of middle tennessee at foxnews.com. back to you. >> grady, thank you. >> doomsday mom making her first court appearance in idaho after being extradited from hawaii. a judge reduced lorrie vallow's bail. prosecutors argued against the bail reduction, saying she has a history of defying court orders.
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she is charged in connection to her missing kids. the fbi releasing this photo of them at yellow stone national park in september before they vanished later that month. and hillary clinton says her apology for her infamous e-mail server scandal was a politically calculated move, made against her better judgment. >> so it was a mistake, shouldn't have done it, da, da, da, da, da. it turned out to be a mistake because look at all the oxygen it was sucking out of my campaign. it didn't end it. it didn't end it at all. and it never ended. >> she's being so introspective these days. the former secretary of state revisiting the issue during a hulu documentary. in 2016, the fbi director james comey refused to bring charges against clinton and her team but said they were, quote, extremely careless in handling classified
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information. >> illinois' supreme court rejecting jussie smollett's attempt to throw out felony charges against him. they say the judge overstepped his authority. last year, -- i missed a comma in that sentence. judges denied that motion without an explanation. smollett is accused of staging a hate crime against himself last year. he has pleaded not guilty. >> a north carolina woman celebrates her 100th birthday by going behind bars. she checked an item off her bucket list by heading to jail in handcuffs. >> are you ms. burt. >> depends on what you want. >> i want you. >> i'm in the jail house now. [ laughter ] >> bryant was in on the gag including the charge brought against her. she got her one phone call and a mug shot. the birthday girl only spent a
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few minutes in the jail cell before going back to her assisted living center. and those are your headlines. >> she's amazing. >> that is one heck of a bucket list. >> pretty cool. >> to each their own. >> to each their own. >> we've got another great subject here. jed, you've been busy. >> yes. i spoke at wagner college, which is where i did my undergraduate work on staten island on tuesday. it was great. it was fun. we did a dinner with the students and some of the administration members. then i talked about personal responsibility. i talked about health care. let's go a little bit to that. >> it's just a bunch of people in buildings making decisions for you. why are you, if you're an independent minded citizen who feels they can take care of themselves, why would you trust someone you don't know to decide what's best for your life, your family's life many we do need health care reform in the country. let's delegate it to government, maybe they'll get it right.
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think of an institution that the government runs efficiently. i'll wait. young people should be crazed with this stuff. you are our rebellious generation. for some reason, bernie sanders has enormous support among young people. why? part of the reason they're not outraged is because free stuff sounds good. you're here to be challenged, you're here to discuss. guess what, that is not happening in a lot of colleges around the country. college should not make you comfortable. you should be uncomfortable, because have you to think. you have the power to fix it. bernie sanders' unicorns and rainbows are not going to fix it. we're going to fix it. >> very impressive. >> when i talk to students, i never read. i always found that infuriating when i was in school. i wanted to talk to young people because of what's going on with bernie sanders. i keep reminding them, you're supposed to rebell against people telling them what to do, be it government.
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i want their rebellious streak activated to say if i don't want health insurance, i shouldn't be mandated to have health insurance, i don't want government dictating what my health and education should look like. i talked about personal responsibility, limited government, self reliance, all the thing under attack. i did get two questions right off the bat from people who disagreed with me which i loved because it enables me to stand up for freedom and i love that kind of forum for that. but it's just a great opportunity to go to these schools and remind kids what the country was founded on and why it's worth fighting for. >> great job. not only rebell, when you said you want to challenge them to think, i think you think when you get to college you want to take a different view of things. it's time to think, you're starting to engage your belief system, what you want to strive for. >> i did a section on diversity of thought on college campuses which we talk about all the time
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and providing students with, listen, you're supposed to go to school and to figure out who you are and think for yourself. that's not happening. we talk about conservative speakers all the time who are driven off campuses, people rioting. you look at what's going on in berkley and stuff like that. it was like hey, let's wake up for a second in the midst of this crazy 2020 election cycle and remember what the country was founded on and why it's worth fighting for. >> are you waiting for the answer of the thing that the government running really well. >> yeah, i'm still waiting. i mentioned the dmv. it was dead silence, not one person could be like yeah this is an efficiently run government machine. >> well done. good stuff. >> a super tuesday for president trump, the focus on democrats as the results rolled in, turns out the president put the big numbers on the board himself. even in blue states. what does that mean looking forward towards the general election? charlie curbing is here to --
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bernie sanders' popularity among young people may seem strong. >> we need to get young people voting in a way they've never done before. that is what our campaign is about. we are reaching out big-time to young people. we are talking to the young people of this country. we're doing phenomenally well with people 30 or under. >> primary and super tuesday polls show not as many young people showed up to vote as they did in 2016. in alabama, turnout was down 4%. north carolina, down 2%. south carolina, tennessee and vermont, down 4%. and virginia, down 3%. >> what does that mean heading into a potential general election contest? here to react is president and executive director of turning point usa and author of the new book, the maga doctrine, charlie
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kirk. congrats on the book. great success with that. when it comes -- you're speaking to young people all the time. why are young people not turning up for democrats right now? >> it's incredible. this is one of the untold stories. super tuesday, which is senator bernie sanders' core support is supposed to be young people and finally we're starting to see what we at turning point usa have been talking about for the last couple years, that year after year you're starting to see college students be less and less liberal and you're actually seeing this with senator bernie sanders. 2016, senator bernie sanders did far better in some of those states than he did in 2020. how is that possible? a lot of students are saying on the sidelines, rejecting socialism and some of these other candidates, especially in states like vermont. this is stunning. this is supposed to be senator bernie sanders' home state. this is supposed to be where he's supposed to run up the score. he finally has a chance to feasibly get the nomination.
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he's closer to getting the nomination today than he was in the rebellion candidacy in 2016. this is a great sign. it goes to show that generation z is more conservative than the millennial generation. >> charlie, actually the young people not turning out as strong as they did in some states in 2016, let me play a sound bite for you, here's sanders admitting as much. >> have we been as successful as i hoped in bringing young people in? no. we're making progress. young people do not vote in the kind of numbers that older people vote in. i think that will change in the general election. but i am -- to be honest with you, we have not done as well in bringing in young people. it is not easy. >> he says it may change, he hopes it changes in the general election but will it prevent him from getting the nomination? >> look, he's competing against himself. that's the whole point. he's actually underperforming what he did in 2016.
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in the general election of course it will be higher, turnout will be higher. the question is, is my generation going to embrace the ideas of outward socialism or soft socialism versus real results. and if the democrats end up nominating joe biden which looks increasingly likely that they will, i believe president trump can win the youth vote for the first time since 19894. joe biden -- 1984. joe biden is so unappealing for the young generation. i think the president can win theou the youth vote for the first time in over 30 years. >> i here's the difference. we're comparing to 2012, with barack obama. you've got presidents with four years under their belt. here's how the base turns out in the primary. alabama, president trump had almost 700,000 turn out, compare that to 241,000 for obama.
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244,000, arkansas, 94,000 for obama in 2012. in all of these states, obama's number is drastic clif drastica, meaning democrats were not as enthusiastic about his candidacy four years in as republicans are about trump. >> you have trump supporters showing up in an uncontested primary, just because they want to do something to help this president. this is unprecedented. you're seeing a grass roots avalanche happen for president trump in these states, which is a good sign going into november. the base has grown since 2016. it's pretty well accepted that president trump is going to win the pr primaries. it goes to show that spying on donald trump, the sham impeachment, the mueller investigation motivated president trump's base to support him in the key states. >> you've got the book out, the maga doctrine, how it's doing. >> it's doing great, number one
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conservative book out there, number one on amazon. it's about the president's philosophy, his successful agenda for our country to be able to articulate why he's been able to deliver results for forgotten america. i wrote it because i was sick and tired hear whac -- hearing e left tell us what president trump believes. >> help charlie out so the new york times can't deny him the way they want to. >> still ahead, the coronavirus leading to a hand sanitizer shortage. purell lisse listed for $149 ine places. >> if you can't buy it, can you make it? we'll show you how, coming up next. (narrator) this is chet. he loves work but lives for the weekend. and now, he needs a new truck, so he came here and saw what others paid
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>> we are back with quick headlines. costco temporarily suspending food samples over the coronavirus. business insider reporting the move is out of precaution and that nobody has gotten sick. and the south by southwest music festival is canceled amid the virus outbreak. city officials in austin, texas called off the festival one week before the scheduled start. 100,000 music fans were expected to attend. all right. the coronavirus is causing a shortage of hand sanitizer across the country. panic, everyone. if you can't buy it, maybe you can make it. >> don't panic. lifestyle expert lee is here. >> we're going to make hand sanitizer. i didn't make up the recipe myself. so i actually got it from the vitaminshop.com. they are a great resource for cold and flu season. i'm not like being a chemist at
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home. this is actually how to make it. >> you're going to put hand sanitizer companies out of business. the two main ingredients is rubbing alcohol, 91% or higher. a lot of them are 70%. and then to that you're going to add -- that's two-thirds cup. then you add one-third cup of aloe vera gel. then you add essential oils. >> how much? >> like five drops or so. >> this oil is my favorite oil. >> you have a favorite oil? >> if you want something that softens your hands, i have vitamin e in these containers. >> wow. that's important. usually when you sanitize your hands all day long, you get dry hands. >> they get dry and they hurt. >> whisk it together. >> how much is the oil?
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>> how much as you want to -- it's really for fragrance. >> it smells quite good. >> i did everybody a little jar over here with a funnel so you can actually scoop it and then you have labels so you can have rick's sanitizer or pete's sanitizer. >> this is important. a lot of places are sold out of hand sanitizer. people are panicking. >> it's crazy. my kid's school sent out a notice with this recipe saying if you need hand sanitizer and if you can't bring it in, you can make your own. >> it's like the slime. here we go. look at that. >> you want to make sure it dries on your hands. don't rub it off. >> thank you very much. send in your coronavirus questions, we will answer them with dr. mark siegal later in the show, friends@foxnews.com. we want your questions. if you use -- is that a tease?
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>> and someone puts their life on the hand to save someone from a burning truck. we'll have those troopers coming up next.
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which could need hospitalization, skin problems, and severe bone, joint, or muscle pain. are you ready? ask your doctor how prolia® can help strengthen your bones. ♪ you're so perfect, you don't need no filter. ♪ gorgeous, make them drop dead, you're a killer. ♪ you get all my attention. >> i know who picked this but you don't. biebs. i'm a belieber. kudos to justin bieber, he found religion, this song is very successful. it's a video, you can go see it, intentions. biebs is back. >> what you don't know is the producers ask us the night before to send in songs. griff responded in a record like 0.2 seconds. he was like bieber!
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that's what you missed. >> get on the bieber train, i'm telling you. >> you own it. i love it. you can have some of my pete-tizer. >> we made our own hand sanitizer. >> you know what my secret ingredient is? a little bit of gin and wd-40. >> that's not in there. it's essential oil and alcohol and aloe. people are worried about the coronavirus. we figured out how to make it for yourself at home, super practical, cost efficient. i love it. >> the coronavirus is something that's scaring everyone in the country right now for good reason. it's a dangerous thing. 16 people have died from the coronavirus in the u.s. there are at least 244 cases nationwide. >> 21 cruise passengers testing positive for the virus, all 3500 passengers on-board the grand princess will be tested as the ship sits off california's coast. >> the president visit touchdown the cdc headquarters in atlanta to discuss the
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outbreak. he signed an $8 billion spending bill to combat the virus. >> if it were up to me, i would be inclined to say leave everybody on the ship for a period of time and use the ship as your base. but a lot of people would rather do it a different way. they would rather quarantine people. when they do that, our numbers are going to go up. they're mostly americans and we have to take care of americans. >> and a u.s. navy sailor infected in italy, the first american service member testing positive in the country. >> that's tough. because the military obviously is on the front lines of so many places and now that's going to be a concern as well for the military, as well as the entire -- >> but if there's an institution that knows how to quarantine, it's the military. >> [ laughter ] >> i've quarantined guys for less in the military. go to your ba barracks. people want information. that's why the president went where he did, why he stands with
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the experts the way that he does. give us the information so we can manage it in our own lives, make prudent decisions in our own lives and don't make more of it than you need to while also being responsible. and the comparisons to things people understand like the flu, so people realize this is not the type of -- this is not the black plague. this is something you can manage and be responsible about and that's been the over-arching message. >> the president has been criticized for his handling of it. going forward at this home, we saw the president on the ground at the cdc, transparency is going to be key. because this story is all about containment and mitigation of the coronavirus, like we had with other swine flu, mers, sars, so as they try and contain it and i believe our government will and a lot of smart people working on it, the transparency is an important part of it. >> that's right. >> another big story we're following, on that note, is the economy and jobs. we saw the february jobs report come out. great numbers for the president and the administration, 273,000
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jobs added. we are at an unemployment rate of 3.5%. obviously this is pivotal. the economy is a chief issue that people are concerned about in this election season. president trump has come out and touted the economy and his accomplishments with respect to deregulation and policies he has put into place that created this boom and democrats are going to have to run against that which is very challenging for them because in many ways they're proposing policies the complete opposite of those that the president has supported and peel people will say will this yield the opposite results. that's a challenge for democrats moving forward. >> we've seen wage growth, especially those at the bottom of the income scale, which is so important and gets to the heart of what democrats say, that the economy has left the forgotten men and women behind and the president hands them the economic data and says look at what we've done. the report wasn't just february. 100,000 jobs more than was expected.
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it was revised up for january and december of 2019 as well. i know the coronavirus is mostly taking hold in march, but there was plenty of talk about it in february as well. if businesses were worried, they could have made the changes. we had brian brenberg on the program earlier, an economic professor, asked him about what's the cushion here, what do the numbers mean. here's brian brenberg on the program. we can't go to brian? okay. let's do it. >> the president has done some things that have just juiced this economy. we know that. it's tax reform. it's regulatory reform. the unemployment numbers as low as they are. the rebound in manufacturing that we saw much earlier in his term. construction jobs. the president is the president. this is the economy he has. he put policies in place to make it happen. you can talk about what president obama did, but these are the numbers we have now and there's very good reason for giving the president credit for it. >> i've been for the last 36
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days on that campaign trail listening to the candidates. it's obviously that dealing with your argument against the trump economy, bernie sanders is now making the claim and has actually done it before this moment yesterday in detroit, that it is the obama foundation that layed the groundwork for this economy. listen to this. >> senator, you say that this is a good economy that's working for those at the top. the reason that president obama said this is a good economy that he's taking credit for, because of his policies, do you -- >> trump thinks that he created low unemployment all by himself. when obama came into office, we were reeling from the great recession caused by the thievery of wall street and obama worked very hard and we worked with him with the stimulus package and other provisions to try to rebuild the american economy. and year after year, it has gotten better. >> okay. so this is awkward for me
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because he is running against joe biden. and joe biden is out there, constantly saying i am part of the obama, biden democratic party, obama, biden, reminding people of the obama legacy. here you have bernie sanders paying tribute to that legacy. if you're going to pay tribute to president obama, you're kind of pulling joe biden into that. that's the guy you're running against. this is a tricky question for him to answer. i understand he wants to take a dig against president trump. you're in the thick of it with joe biden and joe biden is going to come out saying, you're right, bernie, you're right, president obama should be thanked for that i was part of that ticket, pat of that team. thank you for that compliment. >> if you look back on it, the hit we took in 2008, economists will say your surge back, your recovery should be as robust as the hilt you took. for the entireity of the obama presidency, we rumbled along and mostly funded by government stimulus to the ability for the economy to just maintain itself.
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when you enter donald trump and the rocket fuel -- we talk about tax cuts all the time and deregulation. those are important. the energy renaissance in this country, the low cost of energy, what he's done to give us -- to make us the provider of energy, the envy of the world on that, remember, joe biden and bernie sanders want to destroy that. they want to destroy low cost of energy that regular americans have which has so much to do with consumer confidence. you can look back but you can also look forward to what a socialist or a guy captured by socialists would do with the economy. >> we expect that before the november election, perhaps in september, the president will announce more tax cuts. biden and sanders said i they wl raise taxes and deregulation will not continue. >> joe biden's tax increase proposal is twice what hillary clinton's one. he's the most extreme left candidate we've had in decades, more than hillary clinton. >> i know everyone is missing her so much. myself included.
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you can hear from hillary, there's a documentary out on hulu where hillary talks directly to the people and she has some stuff to say about bernie that wasn't so nice. take a listen. >> honestly, bernie just drove me crazy. he was in congress for years. years. he had one senator support him. nobody likes him. nobody wants to work with him. he got nothing done. he was a career politician. he did not work until he was like 41, then he got elected to something. it was all baloney. i feel so bad that people got sucked into it. >> tell us how you really feel. >> a little jealous, i think, of the bernie support. because the thing is, she's saying nobody likes him. i have news for her, people do like him because young people support him. he's not doing -- for someone with such extreme rhetoric and extreme ideas, he actually did quite well surprisingly so throughout the country. i think there are a lot of people -- when he goes to speak at an event and he has supporters there, they're excited.
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they don't say well, he's inauthentic. they say he actually says, believes what he's saying. she was unable to achieve that. she seems too irritated in my opinion. >> people do like him. baby yoda, i brought to pete, so pete was watching the bernie rally. >> i was. i texted you. >> baby yoda is feeling the bern. i brought it here from whatever state i was in when i got it. >> feeling the bern. might not be around for that much longer. >> that's a great shirt. >> it's a beauty. i'll wear that one around the house and maybe use it as a towel to clean up things. >> we should make you wear that. >> okay. >> when it comes to bernie, that hillary clip does not help joe biden's ability to bring voters in. you look how quickly he was ambushed, south carolina, one win for biden, suddenly the whole cascade happens, the
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endorsements come and he's the frontrunner and bernie bros are wondering what happened. if you want that base, that enthusiastic base of young people who love free stuff, clips like that from hillary clinton is not going to help. >> good point. >> we'll turn to headlines for you now. shocking video showing a gang of teen boys beating and robbing a 15-year-old girl in new york city. the suspects taking turns kicking and punching her before taking off with her shoes and phone. five suspects turned themselves in. police are searching for the others. officers believe it was retaliation for an earlier incident. the girl is in the hospital. and president trump tapping congressman mark meadow as white house chief of staff overnight, president trump tweeting i have long known and worked with mark and the relationship is a very good one. congressman meadows praising the trump administration's accomplishments, saying in part i look forward to helping build on the success and staying in
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the fight for the forgotten men and women of america. meadows is replacing mick mulvaney, who was named the special envoy to northern ireland. >> the nba says teams should be prepared to play games in empty stadiums. the league may follow the example from leagues in europe and asia as the coronavirus spreads across the globe. lebron james blasted the idea. >> the fans aren't in the crowds, then why play? the fans, that's what it's all about. if i show up, there ain't no fans in there, i ain't playing. >> the nba advised players not to give high-fives or autographs. >> president trump is awarding two legendary golfers with the presidential medal of freedom. gary player and anika sorenosn will win the nation's highest
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honor. sorenson won 10 major championships. she said she can't wait to head to the white house in a couple weeks. thank you. >> that's great. >> i've been marinating in the bern while you read that. >> my peripheral vision was something. i'll tell you that. >> thank you so much. back to reality. still ahead, chuck schumer slamming republicans, claiming theithey're manufacturing outrae after he threatened two supreme court justices. our next guest used to clerk for justice clarence thomas and calls the whole situation inexcusable. ♪ let's get down to business.
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i'm from brooklyn. we speak in strong language. i shouldn't have used the words i did. in no way was i making a threat. i never, never would do such a thing and republicans who are busy manufacturing outrage over these comments know that too. >> a non-apology after making controversial comments about supreme court justices nominated by president trump. >> i want to tell you, gorsuch, i want to tell you, kavanaugh, you have released the whirlwind and you will pay the price. >> here to react, president of judicial crisis network and former clerk to supreme court justice clarence thomas, carrie
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sevarino. multiple ways to respond to this, first of all, the words of chuck schumer outside the supreme court, how inappropriate? >> have you to go back 200 years in american history to find another example where the political branch has this clear an attack on judicial independence. totally out-of-line, totally unacceptable. that's why you're seeing everyone from chief justice john roberts to a liberal law professor saying no, we can't have this in this society. >> chuck schumer has been around a long time. is it the moment or is it the issue, the issue of abortion, that leads him to this kind of rhetoric. >> he said he got caught up in the moment, that he's from brooklyn, he should apologize to brooklyn for that. people aren't threatening people that way. he was reading off a speech, a premeditated statement he made. i thought after the brett kavanaugh debacle last year, the
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left had learned their lesson. we're seeing a doubling down. this is actual threats against justices. i think he should be censured. we should see democrats and republicans joining hands to condemn because it has no place in our politics. >> there's something to the issue of abortion for left-ists where they go to the next level. their rhetoric is more heated, more angry, more d divisive. what is it about abortion that sends them off the rails? >> you know, you get in front of a crowd of angry protesters, and look, it's big money. it's a huge donors to these campaigns. it is a major industry. and it's something that they're trying to influence the court on uniquely. because i think they know that if you left the issue to the states, which is what removing roe versus wade would do and i don't think that's going to happen in this case even, but if you leave it to the states, frankly the regime we have under the supreme court's precedence here is much to the left of
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where the country would be. you would see a bigger variety, people in a more nuanced regulation of abortion rather than just a free-for-all, nine months, sometimes up to the birthday of the child abortion like we see now in new york and that's what they would like to see across the country. >> previously, chuck schumer called on justice roberts to speak out against rhetoric like this and justice roberts did just that in this case. so how rare is that kind of rebuke from the chief justice as well? >> the chief justice doesn't want to have to get involved in these issues. he felt horrible, i think, having to sit on an impeachment trial. he would rather stay at the supreme court. this was so out-of-line. i'm sure he's not the only justice that felt that way. i think he speaks for all of this colleagues. that's why he felt he had to say this because threats cannot be tolerated. >> certainly the ones named by chuck schumer. thank you so much for your time this morning. >> up next, president trump praising the process within the
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latino community under his administration as more than 32 million get ready to vote in november. our panel weighs in on that, next. ♪ these people didn't sleep well last night. these people did, thanks to somnapure. somnapure from force factor helps you fall asleep faster, stay asleep longer, and wake up feeling refreshed. don't be a zombie - get somnapure. available at retailers nationwide.
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>> 24 minutes after the hour. time for some quick headlines. three senior members of the saudi royal family are under arrest including the king's brother. the wall street journal reporting they're accused of plotting a coup against the king and his son who is set to succeed him. >> president trump's campaign is suing cnn, accusing the network of libel after an online article claimed the campaign was considering using russia's help in the election. >> as the race for 2020 heats
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up, president trump is touting his accomplishments in the latino economy. >> take la a latinos are achid gains. our country is thriving, our people are prospering. >> how important is the latino vote in 2020 and how worried should democrats be? joining us now to discuss, ceo, lilly, steve cortez and democratic strategist raul alvia. lilly, i want to start with you. we have a 4.4% hispanic unemployment rate right now, those are numbers from february 2020, is that the key issue that's going to be driving hispanic voters to the poll, come the 2020 election. >> what i love about the hispanic voters, it's not only said to be the largest nonwhite voting segment in 2020, but it is driven by jobs and the
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economy as a top issue. a fundamental mistake that many make is assuming that immigration is that big of a deal, when it really is the sixth issue in the ranking of priorities. we've been running big data for the last four months. 2 million data points mined and scraped and we keep validating over and over again that hispanic americans are looking at the well-being of their businesses, their families, their households and definitely a strong economic message is going a long way. >> in light of what lilly said, talking about the economy, talking about small businesses, are democrats in trouble in terms of their pitch to the hispanic community. >>?>> i don't think so. not at all. latinos do consider the economy an important issue. they also care about where health care is and how they'll be able to provide health care for their children and for themselves. they also care about climate change and they care about what's happening on the border and what's happening with these
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families that are being separated and torn apart by this administration. those are key issues that i think the latino community will be looking at closely. >> what do you say to that, when you talk about issues like immigration. i know plenty of hispanic americans around the country who support border security, know that is a way to keep their communities. what do you say in response to people if you're talking about immigration or health care, those are winning points for the democrats. >> regarding immigration, it's a false narrative that's often pushed by the democrats and corporate media that hispanic americans are somehow soft on the border. that's not the case. i would say for a lot of legal immigrants, people like my fathers, millions of hispanics like him who went through the difficult, time consuming, expensive process to become a legal american citizen, it's incredibly disrespectful to them most of all to say it's okay for some people to cheat the system and hop the line. i think if the democrats think they can run on climate change and win over the hispanic
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community, they're sorely mistaken. i hope they go down that road. we'll focus on kitchen table issues. this is the best economy ever for hispanic americans. i know you've been talking about the wonderful jobs report from yesterday. 42,000 construction jobs were added, that's an astounding number. hispanics are heavily represented in the building trades. that kind of opportunity is translateing into the kind of support for president trump that i believe will put him over 50%. i really believe president trump can win the hispanic vote in november. >> lilly, raul brought up the issue of health care. i think that is a point that republicans need a strong message on. what can president trump say to the community at large, particularly the hispanic community on that issue in particular? >> ic we need to -- i think we need to understand that people like choices, whether you're hispanic or not. the ability to have choices that fit the needs of your family is going to be key and making it affordable because you can get the best of the best insurance
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privately through your employers and the free enterprise that is an open market for insurance providers. so i think the economy directly correlates or the ability to have a good job to how you are able to afford health care and that message does need to be threaded a little bit better because it is a number three issue when we look at the data. and definitely one that we need to double click on during this race. >> raul what do you say in response to that, with respect to health care, do you not think the hispanic community embraces choices and options and freedom with the health care system. >> who doesn't embrace that. >> people who are proponents of socialist medicine don't embrace that. >> these folks do care about health care and jobs. we need to make sure these folks are getting paid an honest wage for an honest day's work. also too, to that point, they're going to have to work two or
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three jobs because they don't have health care if you're a construction worker or if you work in a restaurant, those types of things. so it's an important issue to latino voters and it is i think the polling that i've seen is that the top of -- at the top of the rung of the polls i have seen. >> i would agree, it's an important issue. i think a lot of hispanic american% not on board as the government being the solution. i thank you for your perspective. >> a new watchdog report reveals the fbi under james comey missed critical details and opportunities to avert home-grown terror attacks. will there be any conges conseq? we'll discuss that coming up. >> plus, president trump getting a first-hand look at the nttornado devastation in tennessee. a live report from nashville, next. 5 indicators of brain performance. memory, focus, accuracy, learning, and concentration.
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>> we are back with a fox news alert. president trump visiting tennessee just days after several tornadoes ripped through the state. >> the president vowing full support as people clean up debris from their damaged homes and businesses. >> grady tremble joins us live from nashville with more on the relief efforts. grady, good morning. >> reporter: good morning. the president approving a disaster declaration in this area ahead of his visit yesterday. when he was here, he landed in nashville and flew in marine one over this exact area. this is some of the devastation he saw while he was here. he made a trip over to putnam county, one of the hardest hit
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areas where sadly 18 of the 25 victims passed away. while he was there, he offered condolences to the people there. listen. >> this is real devastation, like you'll never see hopefully again. this was about as big a tornado as you can have. it was 50 miles long which is extraordinarily long. >> reporter: and i want to show you some of the devastation that you see in this neighborhood. this is the donaldson area of nashville. you can see that house, it lost almost everything. amazingly, nobody passed away in this neighborhood. you can see the path of the tornado as it moved through here. look just across the street here, they put debris in this yard but this house is almost completely untouched. we talked to a lot of people in this area including a man whose truck ended up in his pool. again, amazingly he survived. he talked about how difficult things have been the past few days for him and his family.
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>> thank god we have a rental house and a place to go and four walls and a roof because it's not here. [ laughter ] >> but you know, i call it ptsd or whatever it is, but if something goes bump in the night we both flash up in the bed and freak out and it's going to be a long time before this goes away. >> reporter: and guys, everyone we talked to said they were grateful for the president's visit. so he could see the damage and give them the relief that they need here. but also, so he could see how this community has really come together after this disaster. >> grady, thank you very much. >> thanks, grady. >> it's amazing to see these images. i remember when i covered the oklahoma, ef-5. looks like tennessee was a ef-4. the devastation is unbelievable. toe which keith at the -- toby keekeith at the time came.
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you can't fathom the wrecking ball that happens to these in oklahoma, the same as it in now in ten seem when you talk -- tennessee. when you talk a scale of one to 10 destruction, it's an 11. nothing stands where everything once stood. people are literally left with nothing that they have and i think what you're going to see -- of course, the community as is the case here in cookville, about 50 miles east of nashville, there's a story out that the remains of a 15-month-old toddler, evelyn boswell appears to have been recovered. there's a psychological and absolute direct physical and monetary destruction story here. it's just the worst case scenario. >> it's very heart-breaking. >> in the wake of the devastating tornadoes, nashville's country music artists including our next guests are banding together to show support for the city.
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>> louis brice joins us now. we were talk about how stars come to these communities and play such an important role. tell us what it's like there this morning. >> oh, man, it was a little chilly this morning. but i tell you what, just seeing everything around here, we're around the donaldson area this morning. it's crazy to see the destruction of what the force of nature can do. donaldson looks like germantown, like east nashville. haven't been to putnam or cookville. it's really crazy. i've been through a disaster before back in hurricane hugo. this is just -- to see a tornado destruction, it's crazy. >> you volunteer with relief efforts. you're an artist with deep roots to the area. talk about the efforts that folks like you are making to help recover. >> the people that have been fortunate enough to not be in the path of the tornado, it's cool to see the different artists and people in the
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community, all over nashville, they all have been around, a bunch of different organizations. it starts out with one or two people coming to help out, next thing you know you have 706 people, a bun -- 70 people. bunch of strangers coming together. tennessee is a volunteer state for a reason. amidst the despair and destruction, you can see the love and a lot of people coming together. >> how is the community doing? this community seems to have an extraordinary amount of resilience and it's really inspired so many around the country in the face of such tragedy. what is the feel on the ground among the community? >> among the community, i've been kind of going out to a couple different places throughout the past couple days, germantown, east nashville, and the morale started off a little grim but again, whenever you see people that have been in a tornado and lost their houses, a lot of my friends lost their
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places, completely blown away and you kind of see them, when you first see them they're definitely distraught, head down, trying to pick through the rubbish. people come walking up and start helping out and you see their spirits lifting more and more and then you have 70 people in a an area. i've seen it first hand. everybody's really -- anything from giving out gatorade and water and snacks to coffee to picking up twigs, picking up trash, offering to help. >> small things can be very important, moments like this. lewis, thank you for being here. folks want to help out, go to visitmusiccity.com/nashvillestro ng. >> thank you guys so much. now we're going to toss it over to rick. this may have been answered already. how much warning do you have on things of this size? >> they have warnings. i don't know how many minutes they had with this one. our warning systems are getting
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really good. the problem with this storm, it was the middle of the night. you should have a noaa weather radio, it will wake you up. it's one of the ways to be prepared. april, may, june, that's kind of the bulk of tornado season so we're heading into the active period. we're not generally expected to see that in february, but we're getting there. so take a look at this, guys. really cold. right now, feels like minus 75 in baker lake, canada. there's a lot of cold air in the north. some of that makes its way to the south. we don't have severe weather threat over the next few days but we are going to watch this cold right here. we've got a big storm across parts of the east, the northeast, that is going to be bringing snow today. take a look at that, guys. i didn't remember i had this map in here. jedediah, it's your favorite, daylight saving time, move your clock forward. you get to enjoy the extra hour of sun. this is a storm, a coastal
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storm, bringing snow across cape cod and the island. that will move out of here, behind it a crisp, cool day. by monday we're up into the 60s which will feel a lot better. >> rick, thank you very much. >> all right. we've all had those annoying and sometimes scary robo calls. listen to this. >> filing a lawsuit against you. >> enforcement action executed by the u.s. treasury. >> the sec is cracking down, the chairman joins us exclusively with a new initiative, coming up.
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it happened to most all of us, we pick up the phone just to get an annoying and sometimes scary robocall like this. >> the irs is filing a lawsuit against you. >> enforcement action executed by the u.s. treasury needing your serious attention. ignoring this will be a second
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attempt to appear before a judge or grand jury. >> there was a fraud and misconduct on your tax which you are hiding from the federal government. >> the calls are estimated to cost americans $10 billion a year. the federal communications commission is cracking down with a new initiative. here with the exclusive announcement is the sec chairman, adis ajit pa. >> we have pulled out the stops in terms of reforming our rules and going after some of the bad actors and recently i outlined our boldest step yet, to demand that companies give a digital for instance gear footprint to every phone call. you would know whether or not the call is legi legitimate. it's going to be a big step forward helping protect consumers from the hassle and sometimes the scam of the robocalls.
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>> you say it's a critical step in eradicating robocalls. what is it fundamentally, mr. chairman, that would stop these people from making them? >> so, the biggest problem right now is that a lot of times when you see a phone number on your phone that seems to be from your area code, and you pick it up, it's somebody else, might be a world away. and the phone companies also might not know exactly whether or not that call was legitimate. by requiring them to implement this new stir shake n caller id framework, the companies will be able to verify the accuracy of that call, that digital finger print so-to-speak if it's not there, then they can identify it as likely being a spam call. that will enable phone companies to stop sending those calls to consumers or identify them as being likely spam. from a consumer's perspective, you'll have more peace of mind knowing the call you're getting is meant for you. >> mr. chairman, give me a time line here. when can we see results, when can american consumers get a relief from this? >> the sec is proposing to mandate this framework be
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adopted within 18 months and i know that's a long period of time. but one of the things that congress has told us in recent legislation is that that 18 month framework would give the companies enough time to put the tectechnical tools in place to e able to protect consumers. we want consumers to get relief as soon as possible. we think this framework is a good way of doing that. >> mr. chairman, thank you for being here and a great name, stir, shaken, apparently a reference to james bond movies on the part of the engineers. we appreciate all their hard work. thank you, mr. chairman. >> thank you, sir. >> coming up, a remarkable rescue, two new jersey troopers save a driver from a burning semitruck with just seconds to spare. watch. >.>> go, go,. >> get out of the truck! >> those two brave troopers join us live, coming up next. i was just talking to them.
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>> go, go. >> get out of the truck! >> go, go, go. >> you all right? >> a dramatic rescue with seconds to spare. two new jersey troopers in the right place at the right time, pulling a driver to safety moments before a burning tractor-trailer exploded. >> wow. joining us now are lieutenant edward ryer and trooper robert tarleton. gentlemen, thank you so much for
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being here. if i may ask, that video is dramatic, you can hear the explosion. whose body cam was that. >> that's my body cam. >> that's your body cam. >> yes, sir. >> break down what happened. where were you and how quickly were you there. >> i was on the outer roadway on a motor vehicle stop when i was just exchanging with the driver of that vehicle and then i heard the truck crashing. so then i looked up, saw the truck crash into a guardrail and then the bridge overpass, got back in my troop car, ended my motor vehicle stop right there. transitioned from my vehicle to the inner roa roadway and i saw lieutenant ryer at the tractor-trailer. we were able to get the driver out of the vehicle. >> what was your experience that day? how did you come to the location? >> i was on my way home, traveling on the outer roadway and i saw the truck on the inner roadway, come onthe grassy median. i didn't know what he was trying to do at first. i thought maybe he was trying to go from one roadway to the
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other. he moved back onto the inner roadway and he did it again a second time and i knew that he wasn't going to recover. i could see was going to -- there was going to be an accident there. luckily, i saw out of the corner of my eye, i saw trooper tarleton up aheadnd i just hoped and prayed that he saw what was going on. >> trooper tarleton, a hero is defined by an individual's decision in a split second. what prompted you to go into a burning semitruck? >> with all of our training, we're taught to bri prioritize y situation. my priority was that motor vehicle stop. when i saw the truck crash, that became the priority number one. i realized the driver was inside, that's the new priority number one. so the fire wasn't really a question at that point in time. it was just priority is getting that driver out of that vehicle and then we'll do whatever we have to deal with after. >> lieutenant, i mean, for regular folks looking at that, the truck is on fire.
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i don't see any hesitation in what the trooper did, no hesitation in what you did. what's going through your mind? >> well, the first -- initially i didn't know if the driver was still in there. there was a lot of smoke. i was trying to determine that, maybe he had gotten out before i got up there. i didn't know. so i was trying to quickly survey the scene and figure out what was going on and the heat was pretty intense. but again, once i realized he was in there, we just had to get him out. and i didn't know what had caused the accident, if he was having some sort of cardiac emergency. >> i watched the footage. i can't help but panic even watching it. there's something, there's a quality about people who are drawn to your profession that's so admirable. you mai maintain a calm, a sensf duty. what can you tell people about how you manage to do that in situations like that where you become heroes in the moment. >> i would say it's just -- it
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really is all part of the job. it's just what the job is. although, yes, doing something like that, a situation that is not a normal part of the job. it is still in the job description and it's something that you are prepared for. >> do you get scared? is it scary? >> i can say it was scary afterwards. >> yeah. >> afterwards, watching back the video and then kind of dealing with the scene afterwards, looking at the whole thing, wow, okay. >> lieutenant ryer, we reached out to the driver. he was emotional during the whole interview. he said he wants to say a big thank you to you guys. >> we're so glad he's doing okay. >> not just another day on the job. >> i'm listening to you say that, i couldn't do that. a lot of people couldn't do that. thank you so much for all you do. >> thank you for your service. >> be nice to be next time if i'm going too fast. >> yes, sir. >> big show still ahead.
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bon top of severe ptsd,n and to have a tooth pain will take you down in the dump. after several denials, when i went to aspen dental, they gave me a free exam, free x-rays.
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feel like i didn't know anything before. all of a sudden you have this baby so many more layers and colors and so much about babies i didn't know. all of a sudden it's like wow, i have to reset, start over. over.jed. griff: that never stops. i have teenagers they continue to educate me on things i don't know. jedediah: pop culture. griff: that's why i love biebs. i'm holding on to to them through bieber. griff: they still love bieber? griff: yeah. pete: 9-year-old still writes notes. i intercepted it. i have it. griff: speaking of notes, late -- not late around 8:00 last night. pete: digital note. mark meadows. president trump overnight you may be learning about it right now naming congressman mark meadows as the new white house chief of staff.
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griff: mimick mulvaney will sere as the u.s. special envoy to northern ireland. gentlemen jed garrett tenney with more on the staff shakeup. >> great transition, griff this announcement was not spwaoeurplly unspeculated. president trump made it official last night when he announced on twitter i'm pleased to announce that congressman mark meadows will become white house chief of staff. i have known known and worked with mark. relationship is very good one. i want to thank mick mulvaney for working so well. he will be the special envoy for northern ireland. thank you. the president noted how strong his personal relationship with meadows is meadows has been one of his most loyal allies and vocal defenders on capitol hill particularly throughout the impeachment hearings. meadows said he is honored to do the job and added in his own statement the president and his administration have a long list of incredible victories they have delivered to the country during this first term with the best yet to come i am looking
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forward to help build on that success and staying in the fight for the forgotten men and women of america. mick mulvaney steps down as the acting chief of staff after 14 months on the job. a source familiar with the situation tells us he is also expected to resign from his other position as the head of the office of management and budget. back to uranium. griff: hurt, garrett, thank you you. pete: this pick is consistent with what they have been doing inside the white house after the whole impeachment nonsense. mick mulvaney gave great and loyal service to the president. went with the let trump be trump mantra. that is meadows completely. he is a full-on maga supporter of the president. i think it took some time. the phases of this administration have been empowering individuals who are truly behind the president's agenda and willing to defend it in a way that is familiar, not adversarial and mark meadows is
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the face of that. griff: look at reince priebus to john kelly to mick mulvaney to mark meadows is different because he has such currency on capitol hill. he is the only one of the four who has crossed the aisle. he, of course led the house freedom caucus and staunch defender of the president during impeachment. yet his best friend was the late elijah cummings. he has worked on capitol hill. and if you are going to have another four years of president trump in terms of coming together and getting something done, which is something that president trump said he wanted to do from the very beginning of his administration, perhaps another four years and in the leadership of mark meadows he can actually accomplish legislative goals. jedediah: represent tim jim jordan tweeted the following. mark meadows is smart true patriot and my best friend. couldn't have picked anyone better for the job. usually whether you have people who are staunch maga supporters as you describe them, they are not beloved on both sides of the
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aisle. >> he has managed to really be respected on both sides of the aisle as someone who will cross over. who will try to speak with people who represent both sides of the i'll that's unique in our political culture. particularly someone who has been loyal to president trump. pete: very true. a big frustration inside the white house is loyalists to the president's agenda from the very begin, guys like steven miller still there. people have come in set up road block or bureaucracy fought them at every turn. i'm not talking about mick mulvaney. ron o'brien was brought into the national security council clean it out of obama holdovers, vindman types who still work against the president's agenda. you are going to see even more of that wave of a culling out of people who don't support the president. he will have good relations on capitol hill, it's true. a consolidation of a recognition that what we have done so far has worked. let's find people who truly support it and mark meadows is one of those guys. griff: we shall see. 36 days ago i started in iowa,
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new hampshire, nevada, south carolina. pete: a tour. griff: started with biden presumptive nominee. and now we are right back. and my colleagues in the media are certainly applauding the biden train. >> biden surging mounting an heufpbg turn around on super tuesday. >> all adds up to a big boost for a candidacy on the ropes. >> what the democrats were able to do before super tuesday co-les around a single candidate in order to try to stop bernie sanders. >> you are seeing the emember skwrepbsz of what you might call a biden coalition. >> biden's historic come back expanding winning streak. >> biden comebacks. >> this was unprecedented comeback. pete: if you watch some of the other channels on this election night it was glee. it was giddy. it was like if jeb bush had come back and beaten donald trump how
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people would have responded our sao*eufr is here: bernie sanders i'm still alive. this is the result the media wanted the establishment democratsment would. jed, the gentlemen is it really as big as they are selling it. jedediah: also, because they felt he was the most electable. a lot of media we have covered going pretty hard against bernie sanders for a long time. in the back of their minds even though they are loyal democrats they say to themselves bernie sanders does not have a good shot at winning this election. pete: those are the media types the loyal democrats. jedediah: exactly right. even though they don't say it out loud that's exactly what happens. this is the guy with the best shot of getting elected. once he began to soar again which i think was very unexpected for many people an excitement that couldn't be held back on their part. griff: i have got to tell you when i was in these states one of the stories grossly missed, underreported if you will, was that in many of these states, not all, many of them there were republican primaries and caucuses as well. and the president's numbers, the
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people that turned out was overwhelming. pete: all the coverage was about the democrats because their contests was contested. if you look at the turnout for an incumbent president, what he what president trump had compared to barack obama is stunning. in 2020 alone in alabama almost 700,000 republicans turned out. the vote was a third of that in 2012. in arkansas trump almost 250,000. barack obama still then president running for re-election running for president was barely 100. iowa a little bit less stark. that's a caucus state. in massachusetts. president trump doubling up what barack obama -- massachusetts a liberal state. no knowing it could be a blue state could muster that for barack obama compared to the amount of folks in massachusetts who came out and said i want to reelect this president. it's amazing. it's a huge story. jedediah: people keep saying well, if it is joe biden, for
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example, will people just stay home? will a lookout of the bernie sanders supporters. will a lot of elizabeth warren supporters be uninspired by a biden candidacy and stay home? you see people want to support president trump. people are inspired to get out and volt that is a big question as well. griff: look at this next one though. show me texas. can we see that right there 1,889,000 to 520,000. if you thought texas had any chance of turning blue any time soon that may be a key indicator. pete: i don't do math very well but i do it better than brian williams. that's more than 3 times -- and you look at those other states though, oklahoma. states not texas, doubling,tripling quadruple bring turnout. that's a demonstration of you who thrilled you are to have him four more. jedediah: looking at the results. if you have more money in your pocket. if your boys has been thriving, if you have seen the positive effects in your daily life you will say hold on a second.
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if someone is threatening to take this away, i better get out there and keep it. this is survival of myself my family and those i love. pocketbook issue. while charlie kirk was on the show he weighed in on president trump's growing base. take a listener to what he had to say. >> seeing a grassroots avalanche happen for president trump in these states, the likes of which is very, very good sign to go no november. the base has only grown since 2016. it's pretty well accepted that president donald trump is going to win primaries but it goes to show that spying on donald trump, that sham impeachment, the mueller investigation will be further motivated president donald trump's base to show up and support him in these key states. >> unenthusiasm going to matter. nominated an empty vessel in joe biden. they might do by tuesday. tuesday is mini tuesday. six states. griff: 352 delegates. pete: bernie has set up a firewall in michigan.
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same media, loyal democrats going to be a coronation for joe biden. set up that empty vessel who no one has been excited about in the beginning. find me one enthusiastic bernie sanders supporter. turn out matters. those are scary numbers for the left. griff: michigan is going to matter. pay attention, the first test of the midwest industrial working class white voters. jedediah: also going to matter where joe biden. he is relying on media and people elsewhere to get that excitement out for him. when he hits the debate stage he has been deeply deeply disappointing. can he do anything to motivate the base on his own? that remains to be seen. pete: when will his buddy barack come out? his vp pick will get a lot of scrutiny. jedediah: that's very true. pete: for reasons that you understand. jedediah: we are going to turn to headlines for you beginning with a fox news alert. two people have died from the coronavirus in florida. the first deaths outside the west coast. 16 people have died from the virus in the u.s. there are at least 244 cases
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nationwide. 21 people on board a cruise ship testing positive for the virus. all passengers on board the grand principal isis wilgrand ps it sits off the coast. he signed 8 billion-dollar spending bill to combat the virus. and the federal communications commission cracking down on those annoying robo calls. fcc chairman r.g. pie says stir shaken implement new caller island authentication program. he joined us earlier to explain. >> this would give a digital fingerprint to every single phone call you would know when you got the call whether or not the call was, in fact, legitimate. that's going to be a big step forward in helping protect consumers from this half and stkprapl robo calls. the fdc would like adopt the initiative within 18 months.
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nascar driver ryan newman taking first trip on the racetrack aftershocking car crash at too far. >> it's great to be alive. still looking at my cars. it's a miracle. jedediah: newman is being treated for a head injury. he says it's unclear when he will race again. those are your headlines. griff: we are pulling for him. pete: great to see him back for sure. president trump's economy keeps on booming. can democrats really compete and everything else come november. peter morici, the professor and economist type on deck to bring us the real news ♪ i just want to celebrate another day of life ♪
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pete: welcome back. president trump's economy keeps on booming with yet another jobs report. adding 370,000 new jobs. 100,00100,000 more than was exp. unemployment rate ticked down to 3.5 hers. here to react for the trade commission and university of maryland business professor peter morici. professor, thanks for being here. these numbers, big numbers are they surprising to you? >> yes, they are. i said 175, 180. this is extraordinarily big number. kpeurbl coming after about 225 the prior month. given where we are in the business cycle. caution, this was before the coronavirus. pete: talk to me about that then. what are would you expect coming next? everyone is talking about looking forward. but we have a great base to
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build upon. >> yeah. the economy has a lot of momentum which means that in these industries that are being hard hit like restaurants, retailing, airlines and so forth, there is going to be a reluctance to lay people off. there may be furloughs but people will have jobs to come back to. simply, employers don't want to risk having to go find new workers. pete: that's a great point. the market has also been historically volatile. is it baked in right now? you know, 25,000 seems to have been a floor, a little bit. where does it go from here? >> well, the market is panicking, so it's very difficult to say where it's going because the cdc can't really give folks sort of an estimate how long this will last and that's not because of funding or anything. it's the nature of these things. you just don't know whether the spring weather will knock it out or whatever. so the market is assuming the worst. that's really unfortunate. because all these people that are selling today are going to have crocodile tears come
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september. because this will pass at some point, and the market will recover. pete: at some point it becomes a big opportunity big time. the white house is considering a few tax deferrals for airlines, travel, cruise lines, what kind of intervention should we look for? >> well, certainly monetary policy doesn't work. interest rate cuts aren't going to solve these things. help for specific through the small business administration, so forth. making them loans, perhaps the federal reserve set up a special apparatus loans because they can't make them directly. that would be good things. let's face it, the economy is going to take a hit from this. and the president shouldn't be blamed. pete: get out in front of it, own it, address the fact that we are in a unique situation. >> that's exactly it. what's lacking right now from washington is clear guidance to the states. the states have to implement on things like closing schools, discouraging public gatherings and so forth.
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the history of these kinds of epidemics and pandemics is you don't want people gathering and passing this thing around would need better leadership from washington and frankly a little less hysteria from cdc hysteria out on their own. pete: message coordination. you they got criticized. you can't win for anything do you n media environment. >> any president is not perfect. when this guy trips a little bit the media jumps all over him. pete: instead of being a back stop they try to amplify any difference nut information. peter morici, thanks so much for being here today. >> take care. pete: speaking of coronavirus it's sparking panic among some shoppers. our next guest is the ceo of a disinfectant products company. he says he hasn't seen anything like this shortage in years. s cg
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griff: back with quick headlines, models sporting goods preparing toe file bankruptcy. it could happen as soon as next week comes as 130-year-old store's retail chain has been struggling to stay afloat. and get ready for, this apple set to pay $500 million in a lawsuit settlement it claims the tech giant slowed down older iphone models so people would buy new ones. people who own certain iphone models will receive a $25 payout for each affected device. pete? pete: $25 time wasted. all right. the fight to secure the southern border. according to the cbp, since october, get this number, approximately 14,000 more
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illegal immigrants have been removed from the u.s. than have arrived. jedediah: what's more, the cbp recording a 74% drop in apprehensions and admissible sings the peak last may. griff: joining us is mark morgan. it's amazing to be talking to you literally almost a year ago i was in borro dealing with the remarkable news. >> it is. the ninth month in a row of incredible progress. getting more efficient and more effective at being able to secure the border. what the american people need to understand is although the numbers leveled off a little bit in february. that's not the key. we are always concerned about numbers. but the key is what you just said. is that what we have done with the network of tools and initiatives what this president has given us, we are getting more efficient and better at removing and applying consequences to those who
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illegally enter and have false and fraudulent claim. for the last five months in a row we have actually removed more people than apprehending, those are illegally spwefrplgt we are removal pathway or consequence to over 95% of people we encounter. that is a game changer. pete: mark, what do you credit the most for this? has catch and release effectively been ended? what do you point to. >> pete, that's spot on. i credit this to the president of the united states. i'm a career law enforcement guy, this president has given us the tools. we have more tools in our toolbox than we ever have before. that's why we have seen nine months in a row. and you are spot on. we have all but ended catch and release. that means you come to this country now illegally, you don't have a meritless -- i mean a merit-based claim, you will not be allowed into this country like you were nine months ago. jedediah: mark, president trump is set to deploy 160 active duty troops to the border with mexico. can you talk about that with us?
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>> i sure can this shows this president continued support of cpd and women on the front lines to guard this country. this isn't new. incredulous ruling from the ninth circuit that just happened last week on the migrant protection protocol where they tried to remove that and overturn a nationwide issue in to*euf protect this country. pete: that's the remain in mexico policy, right? >> yes, pete, the remain in mexico policy. what we saw we anticipated is we saw a rush within hours of that decision we got a call about 1,000 immigrants are going to be rushing your border. friday night, hours after the decision, we had to close either entire parts of ports because we have large groups coming. this force come here first and foremost to protect the men and women of cpd and secondarily most important to allow them to continue to do their expansive mission. their counter-terrorism mission. their counter narcotics, their mission of unlawful trade and travel that's what they are
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there for. griff: as it stands now next week, march 12th, you will have to stop that policy, i do understand that. >> that's it. it's a little confusing. first they said you have got to end it across the southwest border. then that same court said well, we will stay it temporarily. then it went back and said well, we are going to change our mind. you are going to be able to do it in mexico and texas, but you will be stopped from california and arizona. so that will happen unless the supreme court stays their decision and i'm confident they will. but we are planning, if we lose mpp, make no mistake it's going to make our job more difficult to safeguard this border. griff: okay. let me ask you, how concerned are you that that new wave could include the threat of coronavirus? >> it's absolutely part of the threat. look, we are challenged with multiple threats, but, that will increase the potential.
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but i can tell you, look, we are doing like everybody else on the coronavirus. we are taking our lead from the cdc and hhs and other healthcare providers as they monitor and part of the tasks force we are very confident as the health risks shift or change and we are asked to operationalize that no matter what that is, cbp is ready to do that to include the southwest border. pete: part of the reason griff asked that question since january 1st, we have seen over 300 apprehensions of folks coming from china. you don't have to be just from south america or central america. how concerned are you about that. >> again, it's a concern. it's absolutely a risk that we are monitoring. we are evaluating and cdc on a daily basis. i talk with the secretary of dhs and ken cuccinelli multiple times a day about this. an integral part of the task force. it's a concern. if we are asked to do more at this southwest border, if that concern changes, we are ready to
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operationalize that. pete: great stuff. mark morgan thank you very much. it is amazing how much resistance he has faced from courts and others just to enforce the law. jedediah: crazy. pete: a stay, supreme court. just to follow through on protecting our country from folks who want to come here illegally. jedediah: disturbing. if you really think about it, disturbs. griff: i traveled with the caravan 3,000 miles it. is a population that is fair to say that is vulnerable to something like coronavirus. the two times did i it, both times i got sick. they had the flu. this is a very vulnerable population traveling in very difficult situations. i don't know it concerns me to see this sort of development. jedediah: coming up, tulsi gabbard calling on joe biden and bernie sanders to stand up and what's right after the dnc changed its debate rules eliminating her from the stage. does she even have a path to the nomination? we will discuss.
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the business of hard work... ...hustle... ...and high fives. modernized comfort inn's and suites have been refreshed because our business is you. get the lowest price guaranteed on all choice hotels when you book direct at choicehotels.com. pete: 3-year-old zac offering to rebuild his neighbor's homes after they were destroyed by tornadoes. jedediah: toddler riding bicycle
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around the neighborhood with tools in the back. griff: when asked why he was so eager to help he told his grandmother that's what god wants us to do. jedediah: someone raised right. pete: what a wonderful little spirit. i would like to see him hammer some nails. i bet he could. meanwhile, president trump visiting the volunteer state just days after several tornadoes ripped through the area. jedediah: the president vowing full support as people clean up debris from their damaged homes and businesses. griff: grady turnbull joins us more from nashville with relief efforts. >> good morning jed, pete and griff. there is a lot of clean up. you can see the damage to this home in the donnelson neighborhood of nashville. amazingly the people here at the time of the tornado survived. people flew right over this area yesterday in marine one before making a stop in one of the hardest hit area in middle tennessee in putnam county. listen. >> this is real devastation.
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like you will never see. hopefully again. this was about as big a tornadoes as you can have. it was 50 miles long, which is extraordinarily long. >> and the mayor of putnam county says this was the first time a sitting president visited cookeville or putnam county unfortunately under these circumstances but they certainly appreciated his show of support for this community. i also want to show you this pool back here. there was a truck in this pool right after the tornado. it lifted the truck from the driveway and into the pool. we talked to hunter briley the homeowner here. he showed us some video of them removing the truck from the pool as they try to get their live back together. >> whoever your political affiliation is to have somebody of that high office to come and look, and see what's going on, i think it's important. i think it's really important. >> what do you hope he took away today? >> the severity of all and how many people are hurting and just
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lost everything. >> and, of course, the president's disaster declaration will provide much needed relief to this area. but there is still a lot of donations that the community is putting together to try to help, including john irish who has a bar in downtown nashville. we caught up with him last night at a benefit concert he put together last anyone to try to help out. we will show you more of that in the next hour. pete: thank you very much. appreciate it. turns now to a headlines. a lawsuit against a fertility clinic after implanted embryos into the wrong woman. the california woman was trying to get back their biological son after finding out he had been born to a woman in new york. they eventually won custody of their baby boy but the family claimed the fertility center tried covering up the mistake. it's unclear if they reached a settlement deal. rough. and after some hesitation,
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republican mitt romney, -- i can barely read republican mitt romney says he will vote in favor of a subpoena in a senate committee's investigation into hunter biden. romney's communications director says the utah senator expressed concern but was reassured quote any interview of the witness would occur in a closed setting without a hearing or a public spectacle. romney's vote was critical. the committee has only 8 to 6 republican majority. good job mitten. space engineering taking old school to a whole new level. take a look at this. an engineer building her own rotary cell phone because she hate smarts phones and texting. the internet quickly falling in love with the gadget. she is now selling kits so you can make your own. jedediah: i love it. pete: dial it like an old rotary phone. jedediah: #do not disturb my
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book. griff: i would love that. >> just dial and that's all it can do. pete: only use it if it rings or dial it. jedediah: which somehow a phone was meant to be used so you it doesn't become representative of our demise. griff: only voice of reason and that is rick reichmuth. rick: originally there were no phones. life moves on and we develop new technology. jedediah: first you disagree with me. rick: cell phones were meant to be used never meant to have phones. jedediah: first you disagree with me over daylight savings time and now the phone? rick: i like this idea with the phone. is it really just like a non-digital phone? jedediah: just a phone. pete: get to the bottom of it, rick. rick: at 2:00 wake up and move your phone forward to 3:00 or move your clock forward to 3:00 and then get back up in the morning to get ready we lose our hour tonight. don't forget to turn your clocks ahead. i think our iphones that
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lady's phone will do it automatically for you. down across the southeast really nice day today after the severe weather obviously this week and all of the rain. things are looking better. see more rain this week. it needs to be a little bit farther towards the north dry out across parts of the deep south a big storm off the coast of the northeast. formed off just to the east any of. we had snow this morning across cape cod and the islands. most of the weather off of land and things are looking pretty good. a chilly day today. behind this we start to see a big war warm-up. then moisture across the west. rain and mountain snow. slow mover four to five days bouts of snow in the four corners area. desperately need all that moisture. great news. take a look at what happens here. 57 in new york. by the time we get to monday, guys, we will be pushing 70 degrees all you haven't down down the east seaboard. griff: we are springing forward. pete: the groundhog was right, wasn't he? rick: i should have paid
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attention. jedediah: rick. tulsi gabbard calling on joe biden and bernie sanders to stand up and do what's right after the dnc changed its debate rules eliminating her from the stage. but does she even have a path to the nomination? democratic strategist richard fowler weighs in. griff: celebrity chef showing us how easy it is to make keto friendly comfort food. ♪ and the radio up ♪ ♪you make everything... groovy...♪ done yet? yeah, yeah, sorry, sorry. you sure? hmm.mmm.
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outbreak starting on tuesday amtrak is suspending nonstop service through may 26. jed? jedediah: thanks, griff. msnbc host chris hayes making this bold claim about the role of race in political parties. >> white people in america have two parties to choose from college postgraduate atheists who live in metro areas like those are democrats and people that are rural and go to church every week and were high school graduates most likely republican. for black voters in those two categories they are both going to be in the democratic party. there is only a party to be a part of because of the structural white supremacy in the american political. jedediah: oh boy, democratic strategist and fox news contributor richard fowler. richard, my head is exploding as you might imagine from what chris hayes just said. what do you make of it. >> listen supremacy part. there is truth to you what he is saying if you are a rural african-american or you are an urban african-american your likelihood of being in the
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democratic party is very, very, very high. everything to do with the fact that the republican party for a very long time has failed in outreach to fraternal. to that extent the people of color voters generally speaking and see that show up in the polls all across the country. not a good day where a republican gets more to 10 to 11% of african-american voters. has everything to do with the fact that they're not talking to these voters. they are not having a real conversation with these voters. not engaging with them on the issues that concern them. jedediah: what about the policy implications though for example if african-americans are doing better in terms of jobs, in terms of opportunities, in terms of businesses isn't that what drives them to the polls? seems to me chris hayes says americans are making decisions based on race and not on issues. to me that's deeply offensive. >> i think we are making the issue -- we are making votes based on issues. and when it comes down to the issues, african-americans don't see the republican party as appeasing. you don't have to take my word for it. look at any recent election that you have had. there is not one where republicans have even scratched
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20% with african-american voters. and that has everything to do with the fact that african-americans don't feel that republican policies are built for them, resonate with them or speak to their concerns. jedediah: do you think that that is primarily you mentioned outreach, is that primarily because of outreach? why is that? the way i see it there are more opportunities happening around the country and i don't really like, truly, segments that are divided like this because i feel that policies that are good for african-americans, hispanic americans are good for all americans if you are talking about jobs, opportunities for growth. why is it that doesn't translate to the african-american community as it should? >> i agree with you that policy short for all americans. not about translating with african-americans or not. it's whether african-americans feel the policies affecting them and the reality is these voters are very smart folks. i'm one of them, right? and they don't see the republican party speaking to their concerns, speaking to their values, and speaking to their issues. jedediah this ♪ a feeling or opinion. look at the data. i'm not talking about polling,
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i'm talking about actual votes cast. there is never an election once again where republicans scratch more than 11%. now, what i will say is this what keeps me up at night is the fact that there is some outreach that donald trump is making to african-american voters and i think it's one of the democratic's blind spot and that's african-american men. we need a message going into this election that is targeted directly to african-american men talking about the realities of what it looks like under the trump presidency and while the economy, while the economic numbers are good, there are still realities for black men that the president doesn't talk about besides criminal justice reform, trust me we care more than about criminal justice reform. jedediah: i want to jump over to tulsi because she has been pretty upset about the fact that the dnc has changed its rules and now she will not be able to take part in the next debate. how do you feel about that? should she be able to take part or the fact that she doesn't have a path to victory here? should that weed her out at this point? >> i think at this point we could clearly see that tulsi gabbard would not be the nominee for president of the united states democratic party.
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has no place in this debate. i'm all about democracy and having more voices on the stage. we are now going into 11th or 12th debate debates where she was on the stage. at this rate voters are not thinking about tulsi gabbard right now. they are having a conversation about either they are going to vote for bernie or are they going to vote for biden, very few and far between thinking about tulsi. jedediah: in your prediction bernie or biden got to pick un. >> you know i'm not going to do that. this election is close and i will say that if you look at the numbers, i think this will likely go to joe biden over bernie sanders. jedediah: yeah, there you go. good luck. thank you, richard for being here. i appreciate it. coming up celebrity chef rocco shows us how to whip up keto friendly comfort food. smells good. fried chicken i smell it from over here. that's coming up next ♪ hot hot hot ♪
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♪ ♪ jedediah: the keto diet craze is everybody. you don't have to sacrifice favorite comfort foods to lose weight. griff: rocco is here to share recipes from new book keto comfort food diet. thank you for being here. >> it's my pleasure. thank you so much. 14*9 book. amazes. anyone can write a book it's crazy. griff griff keto and comfort food don't associate. >> most people think of pasta, rice dishes, mac and cheese. recreate and turn them into keto versions low carb, high fat, moderate. causal mac and cheese got rid of the pasta. kept everything else. lots of cheese, cream cheese,
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cawley flower. sin monthly roll bites made with coconut flower. fried chicken which you guys have eaten all of. it? >> was a full platter before we started. hot coming in, hot coming in. tell us about this fried chicken. >> normally made with regular flower which is obviously a trash carb. i replace regular flower with almond flower and egg white and cook the chicken in an oven or microwave before so can i flash fry it. rick: it is so good. >> you ate it all by the way you are at fault. you are the reason we don't have a food display today. [laughter] ,. pete: what's the crust. >> almond flower and egg whites. >> you will admit you like that. he hasn't liked anything. pete: i understand how you get milk from almonds but how you might get flour. >> i can show you how to milk almonds very similar to milking cows. jedediah: in terms of texture,
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with the dessert. do you find it challenging to not have some wheat in. >> there the deserts are actually very easy still get to use butter, eggs. two of the three usual ingredients. there is a cookie, chocolate chip cookie they make basically butter, eggs and coconut flour delicious. rick: move to desert. >> there is a three-day reset which really get the sugar out of your system. the problem with most of us is we are addicted to sugar. and we have to break the physiological addiction to sugar before we can go on a very low carb, low sugar diet. start off with 20 grams of carbs a day. end up with 40. that takes 21 days. you want to do it gradually. we don't want you tweaking out on tv. rick: few it too fast you will go crazy. >> give yourself 20 to 30 days. that's what it takes to make meaningful change and what most people's behavior.
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you left some chicken. there is still some chicken. pete: hour left to the show here. rick: rocco, it's amazing when you come by. jedediah: i tried it and it actually is quite good. quite dense, actually it's filling. >> super rich like any good dessert. griff: rocco's keto comfort food diet. thank you for being here. >> my pleasure. pete: rocco, thank you very much. a new watchdog report reveals the fbi under james comey missed critical details and opportunities to avert homegrown terror attacks. but there will be any consequences? griff: hillary clinton bashing bernie in new docu series. we watched it so you don't have. to say michael loftus is with us next hour. ♪ ♪ around and around ♪ what comes around goes around ♪ i will tell you why ♪ looking at you
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♪ what i really want to know is ♪ i got the move ♪ jedediah: with these responses - >> hot crispy chicken. jedediah: and your back is related to that. jedediah: macaroni and cheese without the macaroni which i am morally opposed to. pete:they are making smoothies
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with cauliflower. if it was so good we would eat it all the time. there is a reason nobody eats cauliflower. i never found a dish in my life that i liked as cauliflower and if you say you love that you are lying. peter: you love the dressing but nobody says i love cauliflower. i don't want it in my smoothie but i would try the mac & cheese. it is and also ran. so that is where we are this morning. jedediah: heavy news about the coronavirus. combating the coronavirus, two people are dead in florida, the first outside the west coast bringing the total to 16 deaths in the us, there are 244 cases nationwide.
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griff: all of the passengers on the grand princess will be tested off the california coast. >> he signed a spending bill, he did that earlier this morning. jedediah: 160 troops to the southern border as the virus spreads to central and self america. griff: we will have doctor mark siegel on the program later on. if you have questions that have not been answered even though there has been a ton of coverage, email us and we will bring it to doctor siegal. jedediah: it is important to
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see the president taking strong concern in this area and striking the right tone, not overly panicked but saying we are taking this seriously, i am appointing people like mike pence and others that are on top of it and he wants people to feel the president is aware and on top of the situation and doing a good job at this point making people feel comfortable he is on top of it all. griff: we talked to mark morgan about why that is important. >> the continued support at cdc and men and women on the front lines, we are taking lead from the cdc and other healthcare providers. we are very confident as the health risk shifts are changed and we are asked to operationalize that cdc is ready to do that to include southwest florida. peter: chinese nationals have been apprehended on the southern border, we know where this came from, we should call it the wuhan virus.
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griff: not just the we have these, i was there when we apprehended chinese nationals, the population of central american migrants, they are vulnerable and constantly getting the flu and now we have this added threat and i hope the commissioner has taken great steps to protect our border patrol officials and officers down there because they are the most vulnerable. jedediah: amazing to see them not privatizing border security, you would think the timing they would want to embrace that even stronger than before and say we need to have this be a priority issue for these reasons but they can't let the talking point go, stunning to me. >> speaking of democrats not
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providing sufficient attention to security threats this headline caught our eye that you won't or anywhere else but is an important one, washington time says fbi missed chances to stop domestic terror attacks because of lack of follow-up. a report came out, inspector general horowitz does more than look into russian meddling but looking into whether or not during the obama years the fbi missed opportunities to stop homegrown jihadists from killing and injuring americans and what the report found is there were weaknesses in the assessment process was they would look at a radical islamic and quickly close the case and move on except there were 6 attacks that occurred during that timeframe the fbi, the inspector general believes the fbi did not handle properly, that includes 42,009, major hassan, the warning signs were there any to take the proper protocol, boston marathon farmers, the orlando pulse
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nightclub, 49 americans killed in new york and new jersey, doesn't inspire a lot of confidence the obama administration was taking seriously the homegrown islamist threat. where they monitoring and where they following through? jedediah: that should be a tough question for joe biden. treat it as an important issue as it should be, that is something he should be asked about and defend what was going on and why these were being overlooked at the time. it would be a great question. >> someone who won't be asked is tulsi gabbard, the dnc has changed their debate rules on a couple occasions, first it was to get michael bloomberg in the debate, now they are excluding tulsi gabbard at least by their new standard, the rule says any
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candidate must have 20% of the delegate count of primaries and caucuses, here's where the scorecard scans, 664 biden, told the gabbard 2, she's not going to make it, she will not be on the debate stage. jedediah: why does she want to be on the debate stage, she has to acknowledge there is no path to victory, does she want to be on the debate stage to talk about the issues and keep the spotlight on the more challenge the other two candidates and force them to defend their positions or does she just see the dnc is playing dirty and she wants and called out? not sure. there is no path to victory for her from what i can see but i don't know there is true value in having her there. i want to see the bernie biden duke out. >> he endorsed bernie sanders and saw what happened to him, has her own frustration with the dnc. she doesn't have a pathway but
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she is a minority and a veteran. from talk from the left about that you would think that would count for something. the other thing is they changed the rules to let somebody in to the debate in michael bloomberg. now they are changing it to keep somebody out. it is absurd because she has two delegates. griff: joe biden, bernie sanders, our democratic nominee should be a person who will stand up for what is right. i ask if you have the courage to do that now in the face of the efforts to keep me from participating in the debate? jedediah: of the three of them she would do the best job answering questions and give the best debate performance and is being denied the seat at the table. that is the frustration she's feeling as well and i understand that.
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peter: here's what richard fowler said. >> we can see tulsi gabbard will not be the nominee of the democratic party so she has no place in this debate. i'm all about democracy and having a voice on the stage. we are going to our eleventh or twelfth debate. voters are not thinking about tulsi gabbard. they are having a conversation about either bernie or biden. there are very few and far between thinking about tulsi gabbard. peter: i want to go back to the washington times article, you talked about the politically correct nature of homegrown extremism, could never talk
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about radical islam which holds you back from making the assessments, you don't want to look islamohphobic, the fact that his business card talks about being a soldier of allah. when you are free to call out radicalism and it permeates your administration you put gloves on and treat case is not as seriously as you should, get to the root of what is happening is what the trump administration has unlike calling it out, being willing to say what it is. a big contrast and political correctness is poisonous to the judgment of people who have to make those calls. jedediah: teen boys being a 15-year-old girl, taking turns kicking and punching her before taking off with her shoes and phone. 5 suspects turned themselves in. police are searching for the other, they believe it was retaliation for an earlier incident. the girl is in the hospital. donald trump tapped congressman mark meadows as chief of staff
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tweeting i on -- long known and worked with mark and the relationship is a good one. congressman meadows praising the administration in his response saying i look forward to helping build on that success and staying in the fight for the forgotten men and women of america, meadows is replacing mcmullen veiny who was named us special envoy to northern ireland. two new jersey troopers pulling a driver to safety moments before burning tractor-trailer exploded. troopers earned us earlier to recount the rescue. >> the driver was still inside. the fire was not a question. the priority was getting the driver out of the vehicle and doing whatever we had to do after that. jedediah: the driver had minor injuries. amazing the ability to see a situation, assess the situation and help.
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peter: just another day on the job but we say not for everyone. is the case anything? the doomsday called mom lori vallow, police search for missing children who vanished in september. nancy grace joins us next. (live bookkeeper) okay, you're all set up. (sensei) thanks! that was my business gi, this one's casual. (vo) get set up right with a live bookkeeper with intuit quickbooks. when youyou spend lessfair, and get way more. so you can bring your vision to life and save in more ways than one.
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or eye pain while taking anoro. the most common side effects are sore throat, diarrhea and pain in the arms and legs. ask your doctor about once-daily anoro to start treating your copd. ♪go your own way save at anoro.com jedediah: lori vallow, the mother of two missing children is smiling after a judge reduced her bail, she's facing felony trial and desertion charges as her children, jj and tylee have not seen in months. here with the latest details, nancy grace. welcome to the show. can you give us the latest on
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this story, such a complex story. >> in the last hour the so-called cult mom, lori vallow is called cult mom because she hook up with this guy, chad, 25 end of times books. as soon as her husband died and his wife died the two of them got married in hawaii, she just finally agreed to be extradited from hawaii, she was just in court on that extradition and she didn't just show up, she showed up in style with makeup, blue toenail polish and handcuffed and she took the time to curl her hair in cascades around her face. i'm not a fashion review but while the fbi, the police and
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the grandparents are sick looking for her children she has time to put on lipstick. she was in texas and she was on the catwalk, it reminded me of that. she mentions nothing about where her children are. i was shocked because her bail was reduced from 5 million to 1 million. you forgot to put up 10% in most jurisdictions to get out and they may do it. jedediah: what is so frustrating for people as it is taking so long. people are saying why is it taking so long to get to the bottom of this and have any consequences for her? kind of insane. >> she left for hawaii as soon as the cops started looking for his children. one of the charges as she obstructed justice. that is count 3 where she lied to cops allegedly, criminals of the word allegedly and then
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took off for hawaii. the reality is you can't extradite, bring someone from another state if you don't have a felony so police had to work long and hard to come up with legitimate felonies to charge her and bring her home and they did that, two counts of desertion and 5 count complaint, the others are obstructing a cop by lying, one allegedly getting a friend to lie about where the children were, asking her to and is ignoring a court order to produce the children or their whereabouts but i would not be surprised if they lower bond, chad got 353,$000 life insurance on his dead wife, doesn't post bond for her, doesn't surprise me. still no sign of the children. >> with regard to epstein, a loaded gun has been found where epstein died. what is going on with the security measures in that
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facility? >> i have been a lot of jails, prison facilities and you can always expect to find some hooch, jailhouse wine, shank, but a loaded gun? it took eight days to find it after the tip eight days. let's follow this through to the logical conclusion. the gun had to be surreptitiously brought in by whom? family? lawyer? a jailhouse warden is the most likely scenario. if you want me to accept their story about epstein getting 3 snaps to the neck and they don't know that most likely a warden is bringing a loaded gun into a correctional institution, that is a big problem for the epstein scenario. >> what is the implication for the case given this new
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information? >> i've long been calling for an independent investigation into what happened to epstein. it took him eight days to find a loaded firearm inside a federal facility that suggests to me they don't know what is going on in there and jailhouse much less what happened to epstein. once again you can't ignore coincidence. several wardens were law enforcement within a jail or prison were rerouted or moved away from that facility along with multiple prisoners, that is not just a coincidence, they were let go. jedediah: these are some wild cases. panic over the coronavirus may be spreading faster than the disease itself, your emails and questions pouring in this morning. doctor mark siegel is separating fact from fiction coming up next.
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>> members of the saudi royal family under arrest including the king's brother, they are accused of plotting to oust kim selman and his son who is to succeed him. i don't think they celebrate thanksgiving. space x launches a rocket overnight. >> lift off of the falcon 9 rocket cargo dragon of the final fight -- griff: the falcon 9 rocket
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taking 4300 pounds of supplies to the international space station. got to plan ahead up there. as donald trump ramps up efforts to curb -- to fight coronavirus we hear questions. jedediah: doctor mark siegel has that. we want to start with an email from ron that is why is there such panic about the coronavirus and more people have died from the flu in the us? >> good question and i have been studying contagions. the reason this one is ramping people up is it is contagious, we don't know how many cases there and probably a lot more cases that we know and we are getting a lot of misinformation from the world health organization and social media. everyone is making this out to be more hyperbolic than it is, you saw donald trump looking call at the cdc meeting providing information, that's what we need to see more and the other thing we need to see more of is these tests that are coming out this week. i spoke to nyu about this,
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quest diagnostics, public-private partnership, we will have millions of test kits available next week and i will then know how many people really have mild cases, probably a lot of mild cases we don't know about. >> another email, i heard the virus does not respond to jill alcohol but you must use soap and water frequently. is this correct? >> it is not correct. here is the deal. you've got to wash your hands, that is the best way to get rid of viruses but if you keep your hands moist and stay well hydrated that is another key barrier against viruses which if you're well hydrated you can protect them from coming through your nose, keep your hands moist. what that is referring to is they don't have scientific proof that they work, most people think that they work. i think they work.
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griff: a question about masks. the cdc states not to wear masks unless you are sick. why not take these extra precautions on planes and large congregations of people. >> great question too. the masks are there to protect other people if you are sick. if you're coughing and sneezing you wear a mask. it is a barrier against the droplets going out. a plane may be a special case because planes are so close together so if somebody is sitting next to you sneezing houthi you have to be aware of that. the problem with wearing a mask is they can sneeze over here or on your eyes, you have to be most conscious of not rubbing your eyes, putting your fingers in your mouth. that is how you get the virus. a mask, you're not the one who is sick, provides very little protection. griff: if you are on a plane and encounter that person what
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can you do? >> you can alert them, put a mask on, carrier mask and give it to them, disinfect the surfaces -- seriously. i will call the stewardess, give that person a mask because it is close confines. also disinfect these surfaces. the tray table, forget about it. that is where the germs build up. griff: that's where my drink goes. >> and then after that. >> does this stuff live on surfaces for a long time, just on a doorknob and things like that. >> report in question, it does but it can only infect for a few hours. that is why -- you go into a bathroom, wash your hands vigorously for 30 seconds and then go out and the doorknob is the problem so you have to be careful about this common surface and social distancing is great also.
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jedediah: oh no! oh no! >> a very lovable guy, don't mind sitting close to him. griff: thank you for being here. the country music community rally around nashville following the string of deadly tornadoes, some of music city's biggest stars take you inside for a live report coming up. ed. for an amazing taste... ...that outlasts your craving. nicorette ice mint. for an amazing taste... and you may know us fromraving. your very first sandwich,esh, your mammoth masterpiece, and whatever this was. oscar mayer is found in more fridges than anyone else, because it's the taste you count on. make every sandwich count.
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griff: donald trump visiting the volunteer state after several tornadoes ripped through the area, vowing fool support as people begin to pick up a piece is. >> the country music community bands together. >> reporter: john rich stood on this street yesterday and took a look at the damage firsthand and he knew he had to do something to help so he threw together a benefit concert in downtown nashville. >> we decided to donate to take care of our friends and neighbors. ♪
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>> you've got a lot of cash in your hands. what are you going to do with it? >> donate it. >> all my tips tonight -- >> terrible thing that happened. anything we can do to help is great. >> i will stop when they cut me off. >> they will need somewhere to live. what we are doing is a way to do our part for those folks that were hit the hardest. >> one 23! >> we raised thousands of dollars for the victims, family members and survivors, for the
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community foundation of middle tennessee if you would like to help out go to foxandfriends.com. a lot of people don't have money to donate but they donate their time. these guys came out to clear this person's driveway to get some debris out that is in their backyard including a car we showed you in the last hour so the community really coming together, stepping it up last night including big names like john rich and other celebrity helping out any way they can. griff: that is what the american spirit is all about. across party lines, doesn't matter, disaster strikes, you come together and rebuild. jedediah: phenomenal work to do these benefits and these concerts, really beautiful to see in the face of such horrific tragedy, all the devastation and then all the people coming together as you said, really inspiring to the rest of the country.
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griff: police find the remains of edwin boswell, making the discovery of property belonging to a family member of edwin's mother, the 15-month-old disappeared in december but wasn't reported missing until february. his mother, grandmother and grandmother's boyfriend are arrested in connection to her disappearance. the nba says teams should prepare to play games an empty arenas, they may follow examples from europe and asia as the coronavirus spreads across the globe. lebron james blasting this idea. >> i play for my teammates and fans, that is what it is all about. now fans, i'm not playing. >> the nba advising players not to give hi5s or autographs. lieutenant dan from forest gump. >> lieutenant dan! what are you doing here!
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>> try out my sea legs. >> you've got no legs, lieutenant dan. >> lieutenant dan the dog, born without back legs, becoming a national sensation:10 finalists to be the new cadbury bunny. if he wins he gets a star in a commercial. owner in london creating a fake lab for his feline friends. he has been extra needy since human parents took to working from home. it is the perfect way to keep her happy at work. jedediah: she feels like she has company, i would totally buy that for my dog. griff: email us, foxnews.com.
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what do you think of the fake lap? would you buy it? >> i like cats but i'm not concerned about their feeling. a pair of fake legs in your living room. griff: you don't care about their feelings? >> it is a mutual relationship. peter: we had a twitter battle last night because she doesn't want to have to -- i actually like it. turn your clocks forward and tomorrow we get an extra hour of light at the end of the day even if you are too tired to experience it. we have a nice couple of days in the southeast, needed after
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the rain and tornadoes through tennessee earlier this week. the east coast is looking pretty good, a stone -- coastal storm developed and is mostly gone, some snow behind it. it will be a cool breezy day, tomorrow a nice warm-up to begin. across the west a big storm will slowly move across parts of the southwest and california. that is really good news, really try february across california and the southwest. this is what happened this week. a lot of spots, 5 to 6 inches of rain, really good to get that before the end of the rainy season. more rain, more mountain snow and as the warm-up temperatures otherwise, look what happens, temperatures pushing 7 degrees on the eastern seaboard, the trees will be blooming. jedediah: i was talking daylight savings time like romantic poetry, a little too much. >> the more winter the better.
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still ahead, she's back. >> strong opinion, positive and negative. >> he claims to be the most investigated innocent person in america. comedian michael leftist watched the doc you series so you didn't have to. his review. ♪ that chad really was raised by wolves? which one is your mother? that's her right there. oh, gosh. no, i can't believe how easy it was to save hundreds of dollars on my car insurance with geico. it's really great. well, i'm just so glad to have met your beautiful family. and we better be sitting down now. believe it! geico could save you fifteen percent or more on car insurance.
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oven mitts! oven mitts! everything's stuck in the drawers! i'm sorry! oh, jeez. hi. kelly clarkson. try wayfair! oh, ok. it's going to help you, with all of... this! yeah, here you go. thank you! oh, i like that one! [ laugh ] that's a lot of storage! perfect. you're welcome! i love it. how did you do all this? wayfair! speaking of dinner, what're we eating, guys? griff: quick sports headlines, a former houston astros pitcher says he regrets the team scandal, now the boston red sox telling reporters he should've stopped the team from using cameras to steal signs during the world series win in 2017. the mlb finding him $5 million.
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and competitive eater joey chestnut sitting another world record but not for hotdogs this time, chestnut scarfing down 32 mcdonald's big macs in 38 minutes, more than 18,000 calories and one of the most beautiful things i've ever seen, the previous record was 30 big macs. griff: step up to the plate. it is lazy. griff: she is back, hillary clinton debuting in the new dock you series sending her controversial past and making bold claims along the way. >> i provoke strong opinions, positive and negative. i one time said to somebody who asked what you want on your gravestone, i said she's neither as good nor as bad as people say about her.
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the most investigated innocent person in america. >> the world's for most hillary clinton biographer michael loftus, watched the documentary so you don't have to, joins us with insight and highlights. >> i had to do it in stages. i didn't realize after the first 15 minutes you start to get nauseous and sweaty and you think i've got the coronavirus. i was watching the hillary clinton documentary. she needs another one. every six weeks there should be a new hillary clinton documentary. griff: here's one on her wall street speech. >> i make speeches to the camping association, doctors, that is how i made money when i got out of being in the state
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department. i didn't take one of these phony jobs where you are fronting for corporation, i gave a speech for an hour and they paid me. >> i want that gig where you can talk and make millions of dollars. the problem is what you were saying, she wanted to keep it all a secret and then i like open borders, i dream of a borderless society, that is a problem. this woman needs to go away for a while, this whole thing, hillary clinton is like one of those villains from an 80s or movie like jason or freddie can, you think she's done and then she pops back up and keeps talking again, the absolute worst. i don't advise you to watch it alone. you will want someone with you, there will be scary parts. jedediah: listen to what she had to say. >> when i became secretary of state i decided to use the server that had been set up for
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bill and his former president's office. i did it as a matter of convenience, there was no regulation against it. there was nothing against it. jedediah: does she believe this nonsense she is spewing? >> you keep repeating it until you have your own stockholm syndrome where she is identifying with herself. someone should tell the legal system there is no problem with this regulation, throw those emails to anthony weiner or whoever you want. griff: i believe that she believes it is. >> bernie drove me crazy, he was in congress for years, he had one senator supporting him. nobody likes him, nobody wants to work with him, he got nothing done. he was a career politician. it was just baloney and i feel bad people got sucked into it.
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jedediah: not feeling the burn. >> like somebody opened the window and she was telling the truth for a little bit, that is who she should have been on the campaign trail that everybody knows she is capable of saying anything and acting like she believes it but the truth is way down deep and she feels - griff: i what where the new york times in time to time, she is a warrior worn down by her armor. this loan woman - pete: watching a documentary is like watching a 4-year-old talking about dream night the night before, rambling and the russians were there and bill and i was doing emails and then crying and anthony weiner and the russians were there and it was trump's fault. someone needs a nap. jedediah: congratulations on surviving. some immunity developed now.
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>> handed out at a trump rally. stick around for my next one. griff: we are celebrating national serial day with sweet creations. will there be special k and grape nuts as well? affordable, high-quality hearing aids with all of the features you need, and none of the hassle. i use lively hearing aids and it's been wonderful. it's so light and so small but it's a fraction of the cost of the other devices. they cost thousands less. it's insanely user friendly. you take the hearing test online, the doctor programs in the settings. you don't even need to go into an office. they're delivered to your door in a few days and you're up and running in no time. it connects via bluetooth to my phone. you can stream music and you can answer phone calls. the audiologist was so incredible
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>> what is this? >> serial, probably good for you. >> i'm not going to try it. >> let's get mikey. >> he won't eat it. hey mikey, he likes it.
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griff: one of the most iconic commercials in the 70s. national serial day in a very cool way. griff: milk and cereal with two classic favorites, cereal and ice cream. peter: thanks, this looks awesome. >> our most popular, cookie crisp carnival, the toxic flavor profile as cookies and cream, s'mores galore and pills very bullets. pete: how did you come up with that? >> he likely scream, we put it together and it was done. griff: do we get to try this? >> absolutely. >> what are we doing here? >> whatever i want in.
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pete: i like gummy's. got to get down - get some on that. >> a couple scoops of ice cream. jedediah: you are franchiseing this. >> franchising going on. >> using another one. >> people on the mound. >> right there. fruity pebbles, one of the most popular cereals. jedediah: look at it, bunches it up. i have never seen that ever. pete: looks like that a little bit. tried to make one. jedediah: i can say anything i
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want. pete: going in with that. griff: what is this fruity looking thing? jedediah: stay away from chocolate. >> lucky charms. is that enough. jedediah: go for it. pete: you combined your two passions. the cereal bar. you think of cereal and milk. never saw it together and you put it together. it is amazing. jedediah: it makes perfect sense. pete: milk and cream in a few seconds.
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griff: i badmouthed the vegetable cauliflower but some viewers are fighting back. read some of your emails after the break. the pasty one? oh, yeah. as if! like i'm gonna go into some spiel about how you can get options based on your budget with the name your price tool. hey, robbie, you tell them about the mushroom puffers? just about to, pam. wait, are we in a progressive commercial? ♪ come on down to portabella's ♪ it's food, family, and fun what is happening?
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when you book direct at choicehotels.com. pete: earlier in the program we had a keto diet segments where we talked about cauliflower and i said no one likes cauliflower. it is the sauce you dip it in. we are getting some reaction. here is a tweet from debbie. sorry to disagree with you but cauliflower is delicious. you should try it in chicken cutlets. absolutely to die for. maybe brett will disagree. love the cauliflower rants, some argue the same about thanksgiving food. we would eat it more than twice a year. pete: you could say the same
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for chicken. jedediah: it is not true for everything. pete: all you cauliflower lovers, turn for the better. join us tomorrow morning, off the rails, have a great day. >> we have just seen the beginning of a panic. >> it will get worse before it gets better. >> something has to happen. it is affecting every country. neil: with fears spreading as rapidly as the virus itself one congressman vote against the 8 billion-dollar coronavirus bill. he is here to tell us why. a shakeup at the white house. who

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