tv FOX and Friends FOX News March 16, 2020 3:00am-6:00am PDT
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forgot all the toilet paper i bought at home. carley: give you some rolls. we will help you out. thanks, carley. rob: all going crazy. jillian: "fox & friends" starts right now. bye-bye. steve: thanks rob and jillian. 6:00 in new york city. start with a fox news alert. all too familiar already. shocking sight coast to coast major cities turned into virtual coast towns as new covid-19 reality is starting to set in across the country. brian: in unprecedented move city leaders shutting down bars, restaurants, even schools until further notice. california's governor gavin newsom begging all residents older than 65 to just stay home. katie: so far 68 people have died.
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brian: overnight thousands packed walt disney world final visiting hours until gates were shut down for the month. katie: as the virus continues to spread across the world. president trump is expected to coordinate a shawn's. steve: expected he will do that by teleconference. well abored folks. dr. nicole saphier has been with us over the last 72 hours and she is here for all three hours to answer any questions you have got about coronavirus. if you do, email us, friends@foxnews.com. we are also on facebook. you are ready, right? nicole: i'm ready happy to be here. great way to start a monday, early week. i'm here. brian: absolutely. things are changing i honestly can say i never remember one incident. one news story that affects every single person watching in some way. your life is not the same today as it was even two days ago let alone two weeks ago. later in the show, dr. oz will be with us and u.s. surgeon general will be with us live,
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too. jerome adams and dr. marc siegel has been scrambled to help us out. the president handled one thing that's affecting all of us that is the scramble to get stuff. yesterday he said i want to meet the ceos of target, whole foods, high v. general mills, cisco, costco and say listen, show me can you replenish the stores. he said yes. i'm going to tell the american people go easy. we will be able to deliver the food. it's not a situation where you have a hurricane coming and the food is in short supply and you won't be able to get gas. nicole: talk more about that later on i do appreciate how president trump is utilizing social media to talk to the american people. we don't have to wait for a big press conference. steve: dr. saphier the key is right now as people get up, things are changing but at the same time there is strategy behind it. this is an extreme social distancing essentially experiment to see because the more we stop doing the everyday
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things, the more we are less likely continue to perfect somebody. nicole: social distancing is not a new concept. been proven over and over again it does reduce the rate of transmission. although it may feel comfortable and forced the truth is it's not only for your greater good but the greater good of the country and the world. brian: china got on the other side of this and we want to get on the other side of it, too. covid-19 taking a toll on the airline industry. union nighted airlines cutting flies in half starting next month. nicole: comes as international passengers wait in jampacked lines for hours. steve: todd piro is in newark, new jersey with how the trump administration is responding. jillian was in that spot over the weekend and she reported nobody was having their temperatures taken coming in from international flights. is that changing? todd: steve, brian, and dr. saphier, good morning, in response to your question, steve, we haven't received any international passengers here just yet. first flight expected in any
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moment now, but so far no passengers. only people we have seen here so far, a lot of cleaning professionals, a lot of airport workers and like i said a smattering of people coming to this airports to fly out later on today. but, as you said, a much different scene yesterday. check this out. just a few hours ago travelers packed together here waiting in customs lines the exact opposite of that social distancing that authorities are pushing. that scene repeated at airports throughout the country, including in chicago. 13 airports currently processing travelers from overseas with homeland security chief chad wolf promising improvements in the days ahead. >> to be clear the lines we saw limited number of airports including chicago are unacceptable. we did make the necessary adjustments at 12 of the funneling airports and we are certainly glad to see certain airports and certain airlines step up, partner with us and help address this unprecedented
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situation. todd: one of those airlines united announced a cut in capacity 50% april and may. delta announcing reduced flights to europe including suspensions of certain routes and american reducing its international capacity by a whopping 75%. check this out. our own rick leventhal's flight from california to newark just landed. obviously a domestic flight. not an international flight. nevertheless, rick guesses it was between 15 and 20% full. you can see on that picture right there, take a look at the big board. we are awaiting that flight from singapore to arrive here taxing to the gate according to what it says there on status. first european flight edinboro coming around noon. keep you posted what the travelers are saying back to you. brian: keep in mind, todd, we don't have to scramble. easy for us to say we are in the u.s. if we are in germany, if we are in singapore. no reason to scramble to get
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back because you will be able to get back as long as you you have the u.s. passport. todd: right, to that point, brian, that's exactly what dr. tpaurbly said earlier yesterday. explaining, look, we understand the human need to come back to be with your family and hunker down. but the united states government is not mandating that you rush on the first flight back. hopefully if people hear that they wait a little bit longer when they arrive back in the u.s. through that customs and enforcement procedure it will be a little bit more releaksed. again, we will keep you posted as to what we see in the next few hours. steve: todd, thank you very much. also the international passengers help have to self-quarantine for two weeks which is a good idea. the national security council actually put out a message because apparently people are receiving what they think what they know are fake text messages. to say dispel rumors of a
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national quarantine they say there is no national lockdown. text messages of a national quarantine are fake. brian, you were talking about this people are puerto rico interesting th -- freaking out.f supplies. good advice, the panicked buying has been unusual. nicole: has been unusual and i have to say that in the era of social media that exsass gear baits everybody's response to everything. have you bipolar responses. some people say it's the end of the world and some people say it's not going to be as bad as the flu. the truth is we actually don't know how bad it is. we have limited data right now. some of it we can trust. some of it we can't trust. trying to draw conclusions from that. it's really an evolving situation. the truth is the way i keep telling people is we are all going to be okay. we are going to get through this as a country, however, let's just take the responsible efforts right now and make good
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decisions to try and lessen the effect on everyone. not to panic but you always want to be prepared. should you have extra food in your house just something goes. steve: you always should. nicole: if you need to take medication, you should always have enough on hand. brian: absolutely. the president yesterday on sunday, he had a press conference, and as he went out he got news that he thought was really good news that the fed was cutting rates again and buying. but, the futures look as though they are not happy with that move on the fed because we are down about 1,000 points. the president of the united states intended to so i i just had this great meeting with all those people that supply food, you are going to get food and the shelves are going to be re-stocked. listen. >> all of them are working hand in hand with the federal government as well as the state and local leaders to assure food and essentials are constantly available. they will do it. there is no shortages. we have no shortages other than people are buying anywhere from 3 to 5 times what they would normally buy. there is no need for anybody in the country to hoard essential food fly supplies.
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you don't have to buy the quantities because it's hard to refill the stores on a basis as rapid as they are refilling them. and we are using the full power of the federal government to defeat the coronavirus. and we will do whatever it takes. steve: that's exactry right. nicole: important message. i was going to the grocery store yesterday to get a few things. isles completelaisles completel. by commune case that people can have some comfort knowing they don't have to get everything right now for the next month they can go again in a couple days. steve: i get the mad dash in the beginning to get purell and get some pasta and spaghetti sauce and stuff like that. i don't get getting five month supply of toilet paper. nicole: if you have to be quarantined, if they are forced into a self-quarantined what if
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they don't have 14 days worth on hand. services can bring this to your doorstep. all these delivery services you don't need it now just in case. brian: i would like to add one other thing in some of these major cities in ohio, in california now here in new york city, they found out last night if you are a waiter, you are a waitress, you are a cook, you are a manager, you are a host, you don't have a job. you are not working today. and if you are living paycheck to paycheck or counting on tips to pay your bill, your rental or owner have you got to pay your lease, dramatically changed with knows announcements, not faulting the leaders. there is no one's fault there is a virus outside of china. there has got to be a way for washington to act to let people know there is going to be money in your hands shortly. so much emphasis on mitch mcconnell to do something in the senate to pass a package that's going to affect the american
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people. to paycheck to paycheck and not have that cash you are expecting on a monday night is gone. only food we are going to get in a restaurant is delivery. that's dramatic. steve: american life is slowing down. tapbgsd is -- people aren't going to the restaurants anyway. and they are not going to the bars. brian: they were i steve. i saw some packed bars over the weekend. nicole: so did i. i wasn't there i was riding past them. riding past a packed bar and saw. they. steve: coronavirus taking center stage on the first one-on-one debate between pwaoerpblgdz and joe biden. nicole: candidates waste nothing time slamming the president's response to the outbreak. brian: griff, the candidates didn't agree on much else except there will be a primary tomorrow and that debate was like none other last night. griff: that's right. brian, nicole, steve good morning. only thing the candidates did agree on is bashing president trump. they were very divided on the issues given the quite a
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contrast between the two candidates in historic debate. let's not overlook. first time we have ever seen a elbow bump instead of handshake kick things off. celebrated by six feet as recommended by the cdc, in the silence of no live audience, began to square off in the. medicare for all took center stage. >> it has nothing to do with medicare for all that would not solve the problem at all. >> we need unprecedented action right now to deal with the unprecedented crisis. >> feel are looking for results not a revolution. griff: beyond coronavirus brian made the pragmatic corona case to sanders. several opportunity to reach out to far left immigration and fracking to his running mate. >> there are a number of women qualified to be president tomorrow. i would pick a woman to be my vice president. the first 100 days of my administration, no one, no one will be deported at all. no more -- no new fracking.
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no more drilling on federal lands. griff: biden has a healthy lead in the current delegate count 890 to sanders 736. all eyes on tomorrow's primaries yoyou a you mentioned brian. 577 delegates up for grabs four states florida, illinois and ohio. right now all four of those states say those contests will proceed as planned. we'll see. two states georgia and louisiana have announced delays. guys? steve: all right youall right, k you very much. how many people amid the coronavirus scare are going to want to go out to a public school or some place and cast a vote and touch a touch screen. nicole: especially in arizona what they call snow bird season a lot of retirees 65 and older there going to cast their vote. i'm not sure they are going to go out. brian: so much pressure after this is pulled off for bernie sanders to pull out and just make joe biden the nominee.
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georgia already delayed. another group come forward that would take the pressure off those states and allow the democrats already show they will fall behind anybody but bernie sanders. to push sanders to get in line. i know there is a risk with that also very risky last night when joe biden says basically if you come to the border unless you are a felon, you can stay. and number two, no one is going to be deported and no fracking. goodbye, pennsylvania. goodbye, ohio. you stop fracking or no more new fracking drill, you are done. that's revitalized those states single-handedly. steve: so many people tuned in last night to see how joe biden would do because he has had so many gaffes we appear confident. for two hours he held his own. he did a good job. nicole: bernie sanders didn't explode the way some people thought he might. brian: look at what joe biden said in the pan tkerling that took place, i think the trump team, when it's time to go back to the campaign has a lot to go with.
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steve: 6:15 in new york city. and jillian joins us. jillian after all the stories involving the cruise ships some bad news about the navy. jillian: navy adds new screening and testing after a sailor tests positive for coronavirus. first u.s. service member to be diagnosed on board a war ship. sailor now being quarantined at home, uss boxer in san diego undergoing a thorough cleaning. anyone in close contact with the infected sailor will be held in self-isolation in their homes. senator lindsey graham tests negative for the coronavirus. graham revealed his results over twitter overnight writing in part, quote: i'm very grateful and like everyone else will follow the best practices to stay negative. graham quarantined himself and underwent testing after potentially interacting with a brazilian official who tested positive for covid-19. market futures plunged 1,000 points as the federal reserve slashes interest rates to nearly
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zero. futures sinking 5% triggering a limit down so they cannot fall any further. sharp dive coming as the fed cuts rates in full percentage point in emergency move in the pandemic. they have not been this low. rates are expected to remain this way until the economy recovers. a look at your headlines. send it back to you. steve: jillian, thank you. also weighing in on that stock futures number is china. they have gotten the numbers out of their industrial output because of the coronavirus. it is at the lowest level in 30 years. it contracted 13.5%. retail sales are down 20% year after year. so it looks as if stock market opens three hours from right now in new york city not going to be a pretty picture. brian: find a way if they can rally somewhere in between. steve: meanwhile straight ahead, israel using anti-terror technology to combat ko*efts. >covid-19. the prime minister vowing to
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steve: the country of israel is looking at a new way to fight the coronavirus using anti-terror technology to monitor people who have tested positively. nicole: prime minister making the announcement over the weekend privacy concerns but saying there is no choice. brian: how should this work and should other countries try it. the next guest says absolutely. aaron cohen a former member of israel's counter terror team. he joins us now to explain. aaron, explain how this is going to be implemented. >> so israel years ago developed
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the technology essentially able to track cell phones. the purpose was to be able to track terrorists to stop them and thwart them from carrying out a terror attack. they will use the same technology and deploy it the way they use it for counter-terrorism except what they are going to do is going to look at the all of the metadata which allows the israeli intelligence services to look at the history of that cell phone and see everywhere it's been for the last several years. and what that will help israel do is source, trace where all of these people have been. and that can help them figure out where it started, which will help with the long-term goal which is containment. steve: right. the way this metadata works is if you know this person was at that location at a specific time and the metadata reveals that can you look at all the other metadata as the government would then and figure out who else was right next to that person at a time because they could be in
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peril. if you are on house arrest, essentially, self-isolating just don't take your phone. >> well, yeah. don't take your phone but israel doesn't really have an interest in -- there is a very soft lockdown in israel which is likely what we will see in the states. people are only go to get critical things, food, water, gasoline, water, medicine. police are out. but it is not -- israel is not really using this as a geo fence to try to make sure people aren't crossing in the imaginary boundaries to so they don't infect other people. israelis aren't stupidity. we have a lot of people living in israel. 7 million people. if it spreads it can get nasty really really quickly. i really think it's about trying to use that technology to figure out where this started from, where it stemmed from so they can lock down those people who have been there, those people who might have been there, those people that might have been in contact with those people and figure out where this thing started from so they can get
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that completely contained and sterilized so really about containment in order to keep this thing from reaching millions and millions of people and not having enough beds and breathing devices for the old. so if that makes sense. nicole: all about messaging and how you you are going to roll this out. iran had issues because they told the people they provided an app. they are saying it was informative but actually a way to track them but didn't tell them it was for tracking. so there was a big uproar. it's about messaging as long as you are fully transparent this is for the greater good and to protect people. keeping an eye on what people are doing is probably not a bad idea sometimes. >> this is about saving lives. this has nothing to do with privacy and personal information. it's about reducing risk to every country involved globally on this corona war and let's get it over with. brian: you have got it, aaron, thank you so much. see how it goes. aaron cohen. he did mention civil liberties is a problem.
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pushing back i want my privacy back. nic thick this brings back memories. steve: that kind of tracking happens in the united states as well and been authorized by the patriot act. 6:25 now here in new york city. college campuses across the country clearing out and moving classes online. brian: our next guest is the president of southeastern university in florida. he explains his decision to send students home. (howling wind) (howling wind) in the 2020 census guyisn't complicated.o counts everyone living in your home on april 1st counts. my aunt and uncle who live with us, count. my best friend who sleeps over every friday night, doesn't count. (laughs) my new baby sister, she counts.
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♪ nicole: as schools close coast-to-coast for the coronavirus more lessons being moved online. now working parents are being forced to telecommute and teach their kids. steve: lauren sem met at this from fox business are explaining how some people are juggling new reality of life just got more complicated, laura bush for millions of americans. >> i think we have all experienced this already. so millions of students are at home this week, this month, maybe until the end of the school year. what we know now schools closed in connect tut, pennsylvania, ohio. >> remote learning will begin. never been attempted by the city of new york on this scale. battlefield training. >> widespread distance learning will take different shapes and sizes depending on the district. the age of the child and quite
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honestly the disposition of the parent. >> i'm used to having my three kids around, but i have never attempted, i'm not a home school teacher. i'm very hesitant but definitely going into this can, you know, everything i have. >> so some students will check n the morning with their teacherrers online. get their assignments for the day. turn them in at the end of the day. some students will operate online half day schedule. meaning students will be available for questions between 8 a.m. and 1:00 p.m. a experiment for schools parents and teachers. for parents trying to help, patience, set up a schedule. maybe get some lien is i for your boss for healthcare workers, this is going to be very hard for them. we appreciate their effort. and what we are doing in my house trying to appreciate, although it's hard at time, the extra family time with mom and dad and kids all at home. steve: going to be a lot of
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togetherness for a while. >> yeah. nicole: thanks, lauren. steve: meanwhile the coronavirus also driving some colleges and universities to clear out campus and shift to online classes. nicole: next guest is the president of southeastern university in florida and explains his decision to send students home in his new op-ed. brian: dr. ingle joins us right now. tell me how you guys are set up. when you cleared out your campus and you told your students that live there, now you are going to be virtual students, online students, how much of that an adjustment is that for the college? >> well, it's really not a major disruption for our university class delivery system because for the last seven years, we have been absolutely committed to creating new ways to deliver education. and we have seen it effective. we were just seven years ago about 2400 students and this past fall over 10,000 students because we have learned how to create new ways of delivering
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education that actually takes -- we use the phrase around here take scholarship to the streets. expecting students -- we have always expected the students to come to us. we need to learn how to take education to where students are we have been ready for this kind of delivery for quite a while. nicole: getting the sense you say this is also an opportunity in your talking points, you say this is an opportunity for other universities across the nation if they are not already up to par with their electronic communications and this is a great time to make sure that in an event like this that it isn't a massive disruption. my son is down at ole miss luckily he was on spring break when everything started ramping up here. instead of sending him back to ole miss to clean out his dorm the safest thing to do was to come home. a lot of schools don't necessarily have the online communication. i was thankful that ole miss did. i think this calls on them for future episodes to make sure that they are prepared for something like this.
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>> absolutely. this is going to force universities and colleges across this nation to pour resources into making sure that they can provide distance learning or remote learning. because this is going to become the norm. this is a watershed moment for higher education. things that were considered to be on the fringe or, you know, cutting edge, now quite frankly it is going to be the way you deliver higher education. it's what people have been calling for for years now. it's all about accessibility, how do we create access to education. create a menu of education it. provides experiential education. they can also apply what they are learning in context. steve: right. >> a lot of students there working on the job they can't take time to do full-time. but they can interact in a remote way and do it right along with what they are experience is in the workforce. so it's very helpful. all of these things will ultimately drive down the cost of higher education. steve: that sounds good right there. exit question, how has this been
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received by the students because, you know, they might not be back this year? >> >> well, here's the deal. these students when it comes to technology or r. extremely savvy. steve: c.e.o. >> they are digital. they understand this kind you have delivery. so, for example, our courses they may meet at the same time as if they were on campus face to face with the teacher. google hangout. virtual classroom, those kind of experience. get the same kind of content but it's going to be delivered in a different way. so the outcomes of that particular course. the competency of that particular course going to continue for them. brian: kent, thanks so much. i was able to be his commencement speaker and go through campus. great campus life. they explained to me at the time we have a huge online student body as well. so, it's great to see that they are ready to go. you will see a video. you will see a professor come at you and tell you as opposed to just getting assignment to go do
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this today and go look to that page in your textbook. is he ready i don't know how many other universities are ready. nicole: we will see. steve: they have got to do something. all about social distancing. meanwhile, straight ahead, have you seen images from manicked shoppers cleaning out shelves like that. and airline crawl. affected every part of our american lives. katie: up next talking to our panel of moms and answering their questions coming up.
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captain d's. >> we see what's happening. we see what's going on in other countries. we are looking at -- we are learning from watching other countries, frankly there is a very contagious -- this is a very contagious virus. it's incredible. it's something that we have tremendous control over. steve: there you have got
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president trump yesterday assuring americans amid the coronavirus outbreak. but there is still a lot of uncertainty, nicole. nicole: that's right. absolutely. joining us now with their question is our panel of moms, karras, cammie, kim, and myself. here to answer the questions. steve: we have brought you together by the miracle of skype. karis what's your question for dr. saphier. >> i have a couple of questions. first my kids are home from school now. do i keep them tucked and safe away inside and my husband or myself goes out to get groceries? are they allowed to go out right now. nicole: great question. all dealing with that i have three kids of my own. get outside as much as you can. it's warmer. fresh air. backyard playing. we had a fierce game of playser tag going on in backyard. of course i wind everything down as soon as we came back inside. and when it comes to actually going out to public outings, like if you need to run to the
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grocery store or gas station or whatever it might be, i really just think one person goes. but that person needs to be careful. because they are exposing themselves. before they have come back inside. change the clothing, they absolutely want to wash their hands as soon as they come in. and take it a step further and resanitize the doors as they come in and out. i mean, cautious precaution. steve: i could hear in my neighborhood last night a lot of kids were playing together. a lot of the neighbors were all together playing a game of ball. what about that? nicole: we do not want to halted all physical activity especially when it comes to our children. we also want to make sure that we're not being too panic-ridden that our children become paralyzed in fear. you don't necessarily want to have large playdates together but if you know you are very close with the family, you know, if you want to be playing outside together, that's fine. but you need to reiterate not touching each other and certainly not putting their fingers in their mouth. steve: what's your question for the doctor. >> thank you all so much for
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continuing to give us such great information. really reassuring in this time. nicole: thank you all for joining us. >> as you were talking about going outside i was in the apartment building and i have to get in an elevator to go outside. so even if the elevator car is empty, how am i sure to be safe and know i'm not getting into something where somebody else who is contaminated has just been? is that something i need to be concerned about? nicole: that's a great question and legitimate fear respiratory droplets can hang out in the air for longer than when the person is there the risk of transmission after a person has already left is very low. it's not zero. the truth is we don't know exactly how contagious this is. it does seem to be more contagious than the flu and other viruses. the cautious precautions can you have when you go into the elevator try to obviously not be in a crowd h elevator. if you are going to have to press the buttons i like to use my knuckle not my fingertip. the truth is you don't want to stop living your life.
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go in and out of the elevator. you probably can't go up and down 22 flights of stairs every day. go in the elevator and risk of getting the infection is low even if someone who has been infected has been ther in there. highly contagious. a lot of people have it. if you do end up contracting the illness, you have to know the far majority of people do recover. steve: right. kim, got a question? >> i do. i have have noticed on store shelves that the homeo pathic and organic products seem to be the ones left behind even by enthusiasts and in lieu of bleach and, you know, hand sanitizer. are there any organic or homeo pathic kind of answers for this that we can use instead of these hard core chemicals. katie: a part of that is because academic literature shows that bleach and sanitizer does effectively kill viruses whereas
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a lot of the homeo pathic remedies taking vitamin c and zinc although can boost immune systems. the data whether they will prevent infection not quite there and it kind of waxes and wayanwanes a little bit. a balanced diet full of fruits, vegetables, hydration, exercise. i implore everyone to continue doing that now as much as possible. if you like to take i have the minute c or zinc or there is some homeo pathic remedy that you like to do that your doctor is okay with you taking, continue doing it. i wouldn't change anything drastically as to what you consume in your body right now because sometimes that can actually have consequences of its own. don't change up things a lot. soerbgd is big enough for us right now. let's not change other things. steve: no kidding. loss angela? >> first, i would like to thank all our healthcare professionals and first responders.
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and my question is a lot of people are comparing the coronavirus with the flu. do you believe this is a fair comparison or concerned about this. katie: great question, comes up a lot. the flu is prevalent. which is why we are quick to compare it with that i would like to say that the coronavirus by this time next year we will say it was similar to the flu. but the truth is we don't actually know. right now it does seem that covid-19, the vice causing covid-19 is a more contagious than the flu. the case fatality rate, meaning the amount of people that die from covid-19 at this point is higher than what we see for the flu. but we truly won't know how they compare until this is all said and done and we can look back at the data. we just don't know right now. so best case scenario, we should just pretend that it's significantly worse than the flu and hope we are right. steve: all right. moms, thank you very much for a
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great round of questions. good luck with your children today. and for the next couple of weeks there at home. all right. it is now a quarter before the top of the hour, and adam joins us with a look at the weather ahead on this businessy monday. adam: busy monday. cold monday actually across large portions of the country. giving you winter-type feel. temperatures this morning in large swath of the country down into the 30's and 20's. 27 degrees in cleveland. stretching back further up to the north and west lower 30's and 20's. with that a couple of spots that we are tracking snow some snow in the upper northwest and northern plains some snow. another round of big winter weather. this has been round after round for the west coast. unfortunately they are getting a little bit more. currently looking at heavy rain from central california stretching down to southern california. and as this runs over some higher elevations that turns into snow. we will continue to see snow. this is our food parade and this lifts up into the mountains, this is areas where this becomes snowfall. some of these areas well over a
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total foot of snowfall. this is our precip accumulations see some areas getting some blues in there, 18 inches to 24 inches of snow in this area. this is going to be the big system we attention. to say otherwise, temperatures do warm up across the country the next couple of days. here are your monday highs by the time we get into tuesday. by the time we get into wednesday, feeling a little bit more like spring by the middle of this upcoming week. tossing it back down to you guys. steve: we will be ready for that. nicole: looking forward to warmer weather so we can get outside more while we are soerbgd. social distancing. steve: bernie sanders and joe biden tapping their elbows. tony katz said both candidates lost. an explanation coming up next. how do your teeth get a dentist-clean feeling?
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>> my lord, bernie, you are running an ad saying i'm opposed to social security. >> may i ask you a question, joe? >> yeah. >> have you been on the floor of the senate talking about the necessity with pride about cutting social security, cutting medicare? >> no. >> all right. america go to the website right now. go to the youtube right now. steve: many people did. in their first one-on-one show
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down bernie and biden faced off in scrub down relocated debate with no audience ahead of another round of primaries tomorrow. brian: did bernie do enough to stop biden's momentum. bring in radio show coast tony katz went on two hours. who won? >> well, clearly in the conversation early on about coronavirus, joe biden won because biden looked rational. bernie doesn't stop because is he a true believer. he wants socialized medicine and i want socialized society. joe biden's response was let's handle coronavirus and then we can talk about other things. by comparison, not by reality, but by comparison joe biden came across extremely effective and he did the one thing that i think nobody thought he could do, he got through sentences without stammering. he did not get himself involved in the word salad. he was actually while i don't agree with him on policy, he was
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very clear in his statement. yes he confused sars with coronavirus or it was ebola with coronavirus and then it was bernie who did sars with coronavirus. right? they got those things confused those are small things in the major scheme. but biden looked very, very competent compared to bernie's desire to have his true believer life come true and be socialized medicine for all. steve: to that point at one point joe biden pointed that out and said, look, they have single payer in italy and it's not working out there. look at the numbers. >> yeah. and it's a solid point -- a point to be made about a series of countries. also, bernie doesn't do well without an audience. and not having an audience there because of coronavirus and because of the limiting of crowd sizes and social distancing. he wasn't able to use his booming voice as a way to accentuate his nonsensical position. that hurt him a lot. and it was apparent in the whole two hours.
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nicole: tony, even though biden has been critical of president trump's actions on the coronavirus. interesting during the debate he did not come out and heavily criticize he standed more uniformed with a union tpaoeufd america and bernie sanders came out and just ripped on president trump really what america needs to hear right now? no certainly not. great message or all of america ripping on the president doesn't give us information we need. joe biden said he would have the right thing that is a pretty big insult to dr. fauci jerome adams and dr. burks and everybody else on that stage every day giving u.s. the updates from this team. there was, i think, some insults from joe biden but, again, the comparative, man, bernie just could not figure out that his message, the same message that isn't getting him victory now isn't going to get him victories in the future. ainsley: all those people you
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mentioned jerome adams and dr. burks and dr. fauci part of obama's team. to say he is going to have the right team it's the same team. brian: talk about the substance of joe biden are extremely alarming. case in point. let's listen. >> i will send to the desk immediately a bill that requires to access to citizenship for 11 million undocumented folks. and the first 100 days of my administration, no one, no one will be deported at all. no more -- no new fracking. no more -- no more drilling on federal lands. brian: wow, goodbye pennsylvania and goodbye ohio when you say no more fracking. >> goodbye pennsylvania, goodbye ohio and i would argue goodbye michigan as well. this is not something that wins in a general. follow selena zido on these subjects she does some of the yeomen's work here. he was saying no new fracking. trying to flip the baby whether
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there would be fracking. we would all know he would go to the no fracking world in a time where jobs are going to be problematic the economy is in a strange point because of coronavirus there will be people who lose their jobs. here is joe biden saying oh, by the way, even less jobs. man, that's not going to work in the rust belt at all. steve: tony katz joining us today to talk about politics. tony, thank you very much. meanwhile straight ahead, we are going to talk more about coronavirus. dr. oz is going to join us for the next hour. plus surgeon general jerome adams joins us with an update on the trump administration's response. he is next.
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bass pro shops and cabela's... your adventure starts here. steve: it is exactly 7:00 in new york city and a fox news alert. a shocking sight from coast to coast. major cities slowly turning into ghost towns as a new covid-19 reality sets in coast to coast. brian: get this? n. unprecedented move city leaders shutting down bars, restaurants and schools until further notice. gavin newsom all residents over 65 to just stay home. in new york, you can deliver food but you can't go in and eat it there. nicole: so far 68 people have died from covid-19 in the u.s. at least 3200 have gotten sick. brian: all hour have dr. oz with us along with dr. nicole saphier to answer any questions. we have a huge hour. we appreciate you being here again dr. oz. we are not wearing you out, are
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we? >> i spent my whole life training and many doctors for this moment especially if you are a clinical physician i still take care of patients. learn how to tell people in a way that doesn't scare them and immobilize them that's what you need right now. steve: look at everything happening like gavin newsom if you are over 65 in california stay in your house. essentially you are under house arrest. close the bars and restaurants and the schools here in new york city. and you hear that news and it's kind of scary. at the same time, when you realize what the federal government is doing it's just extreme social distancing. the best way to stop you from infecting me is to keep me away from you. >> not everyone is aware of the importance of that talking to a prominent restaurant in new york whether he should close his restaurant. he said people are dancing in my restaurant. they don't listen. and they are not aware of it. if you saw this modeling of what we predict would happen in this country if we do not do soerbd. social distancing it's italy.
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brian: they lost 368 people in one day. >> won't have a bad infection but we have more than a million deaths. we don't want that best case scenario is our public leaders say what they're saying which i firmly endorse shut things down. social distancing works and then they are wrong. we don't have a million deaths and don't have a big problem and not overreacting. that means we did the right thing. steve: that's okay. >> that's korea. nicole: overreact than underreact. we have decreasing cases in china and south korea. china they shut it down and aggressive with the testing at the beginning. we were aggressive with the testing in the get in. why we have increasing cases. shut things down now as we are trying to do. if we do it now appropriate social distancings we won't have to shut it counsel as long as china did six, seven eight weeks. much shorter but people aren't listening. >> benefit the middle of the country. primarily coastal, europe from the east coast asia from the west coast.
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look at the cities and states that are being influence you had in china when they shut wuhan down the largest quarantine ever in history 60 million people. look at the number of cases in the surrounding districts. it wasn't bad. they never got a spike. in this country of we could avoid catastrophes in most of the states if the two states on the coast new york and california in particular are susan aggressive. but others have to join. in. brian: i know when you you were in the restaurant yesterday i know a lot of people in that business they can't afford to miss a few days let alone a few weeks. where are they going to get their tips from. all of a sudden they find out last night in new york city or los angeles all of california restaurants don't deliver. who is paying my bills. >> i wasn't in the restaurants. i wouldn't go to a restaurant. called me for advice and i told him if people weren't aware of the risk he had an obligation overan audience anymore. the person who entertains the audience is out of work. you lose a lot of people you
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would ever think of. that's why some of these discussions we are going to have with political leaders are important. support people out of work not of their own fault right away. brian: right away. got to get money in their hands. bring in dr. jerome adams the surgeon general he has been all over. this dr. adams, thank you so much for joining us. >> thank you. it's been a big last couple of days. you heard about the presidential emergency declaration the cdc put out new guidelines on large social gatherings. i really believe if you watch the press conference yesterday that we made a turning point on testing in this country. steve: and, in fact, with that, the nationwide halt to gatherings of more than 50 people for the next 8 weeks including weddings, festivals, parades functions and sporting events. when people see that it is shocking but you say it's absolutely needed right now. >> well, absolutely dr. oz and sapphire critical in this country. we are where italy was two weeks
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ago in terms of our numbers. we have a choice to makes a a nation. do we want to go to the direction of south korea and really be aggressive and lower our mortality rate and got direction of italy. look at the projection. we could be italy every hope south korea if people actually social distancing. if we do the health advice we have been talking about such as washing your hands and covering your cough and cleaning surfaces. >> dr. adams when you came on my show last week you were clear local communities should make decisions about shutting down do the right thing we would be okay. there has been a significant shift which i'm supportive of do the right thing tell people what they have to do. no more gatherings of more than 50 people a rule. figure easier figure out what to do. why the shift from local autonomy to the federal government giving ferrari strict recommendations and perhaps even
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more draconian ones coming up that's a great question. be careful when we say let's do what china did and south korea did. a lot of our public health authorities lies in the state and local level and i have worked for a local health department and state health department. what we are seeing now is that these state and local health departments are saying give us guidance. give us more cover, we want you to come in and tell us what we should be doing to protect ourselves. this is an unprecedented situation. we are seeing unprecedented things happen such as the presidential deck collar raeufplgts such as the cdc saying look pull down these large gatherings over the next 6 to 8 weeks. nicole: dr. adams we have had conversations being proactive instead of reactive chronic disease and cancer and now coronavirus. why isn't there a vaccine and when is it going to be available? and i think have you mentioned that it is great to keep people in the know about the vehicle seen. vaccine is not going to be the answer. of the answer right now is
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social distancing. update us on the stalls of th s. >> we are hearing great things across the country about vaccine development. private industry, folks are leaning in to this. you are seeing tremendous innovation going on what people need to know what a vaccine isn't going to save the day at least this first go around the vaccine can be helpful if we can get it developed assuming coronavirus comes back again next year and next season. when you look at h1n1. when you look at mers and sars. what helped us with basic infection control and public health measures that's what's going to get us through. this social distancing, people washing their hands and i know people are tired of hearing me say it and you saying it dr. oz and you saying it dr. saphier. the number one way to protect yourself from coronavirus is by washing your hands properly for 20 seconds. the number two way is to stay away from people who are sick. those are the two things get us out of this. brian: couple of things, this
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drive-thru test. we hear it's in many states now and private sector is ready to launch with quest and other places when? when will we see quest get the tests and find out the test results. >> we have reached a turning point. the cdc stood up a test less than one week for a virus. that's the record. cdc was never designed to provide hundreds of millions of tests. designed to respond to outbreaks. went from cdc testing which was slow by almost design. and then we actually stood up 83 different state labs and you saw testing increase there the turning point was last thursday. when the fda approved a new rapid threw put test which will exponentially increase the amount of tests that can be run. we also had admiral jet as the testing czar to improve testing in the labs. see more testing at the local level. i was at federally qualified
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health center in new orleans homeless clinic. they are doing their other coronavirus for hiv patients. proves it can be done on a local level. the or thing i will mention more folks in blue uniforms. admiral jawah cdc and fema and identify high risk areas and up to 19 states you are going to see 30 to 40 new pods that will enable drive-thru and walk through testing with folks with the capacity to do 2,000 to 4,000 tests per week. what i want folks to know most importantly because what they care about is what is happening in my community. we are going to be focusing in on those at highest risk first. healthcare workers and first responders. and people over 65 with fever and symptoms. and then you're going to see more capacity from, again, local hospitals and i'm already hearing it. people don't care about numbers. what they care about is can i get a test and i know in my
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hometown, small rural community they are standing up drive-thru testing through the local hospital today in cumberland, maryland which is where i have other family members. they have testing now available. people are seeing it. we have reached the turning point and because of the private industry. nicole: dr. adams that's great news and i can say i'm seeing it more and more in my area as with. you sent out a tweet yesterday patro practicing physn who is also married to a practicing physician. you are calling for people to cancel elective surgeries to postpone them. we saw that in italy they did that as reaction no, sir a presennive measure. i have think you are right we need to get in front of this to make sure that our healthcare systems and wrerbgs available should we get to italy level numbers. my question is who do you think should be in charge of which procedures are postponed versus which are cancelled? should it be the hospital? should it be the individual physician? >> well, i think that's a great question. and i have been in touch with the american college of surgeons. i have been in touch with the american hospital association.
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and we're going to be talking more today to try to figure out how we can give more guidance because elective doesn't mean nonurgent. there are kats. thercathss.other my wife went th cancer treatment is that elective? yes. is that something can you put off for six months? no. we want to make sure folks understand what that means. but we also want people to understand that look, we have got to lean into this over the next two weeks. and things like tonsils, things like total hips and total knees. we need to pull those down until we can get a handle on and this flatten the curve so we aren't using up our personnel needed to respond to coronavirus so we aren't taking up icu beds and hospital beds and sailing we have to put our coronavirus out in tents in the streets. >> dr. adams, if you can. is it difficult to make a decision, our r. folks in the inner circle in agreement what
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we need to know? what is your best prediction of how much we are going to have to tighten our belt? you mentioned two weeks? probably going to continue most of these regulations for at least may. what's your best guest? >> well, it's absolutely tough to make these decisions and it's why we are meeting several times a day. every action has an equal and opposite reaction. you close the schools. you may end up forcing the kids to stay at home with their grandparents who are at highest risk. you close work. and then people lose their jobs and they can't put food on the table. we are saying here is what you should do from a health point of view and economic consequences and social consequences. we have the best people in the world who are working 20, 22 hours a day. really leaning in to this issue. and i want the american people to know that i'm in there fighting to make sure people know what the medical -- best medical advice is but i'm also listening to make sure we aren't missing something like okay, if we do, this then we don't want to squeeze the balloon and have
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it pop up somewhere else. >> time estimate, when can we go back in the water, you think, best guest? >> we can't give you a specific time. what we can do is look at china. we really leaned it or china lean dollars into this and weigh saw it was about a couple months that they were able to see cases go down significantly. same thing in south korea. we are hopeful if we lean into this then maybe in about six to eight weeks we will get over the majority of the pain. we will have flattened the curve and we can start to slowly get back to life as normal. steve: life is not normal on this monday, doctor, as you know. there are millions american children who are not going to school. at home with their parents. the parents are trying think how do i keep my family healthy during this challenging time and at the same time given work requirements for some parents. thinking okay, not going to school. should i put them in day care? what's your recommendation regarding day care?
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>> one of the things have you heard about financial package going through congress. going to provide more relief for workers and government assistance. we want people in a small as group as possible. we know at school they will be around hundreds of other kids. if we can get them around 10 kids instead of around 100 kids. that's going to be better, ultimately, we really love for people to maintain six feet of distance. we understand everyone can't do that. and that's why we are trying to make sure we think about what are the supports people need to put themselves in the best possible situation to be healthy. i have a 15, 14, and 10-year-old at home and i understand this as much as anyone does. it's really difficult to keep kids apart, especially when they get bored. brian: when they get bored which is happening. dr. jerome adams, thanks so much. >> thank you. nicole: thank you. brian: meanwhile, we have a lot going on today not only with the virus but other news as it relates to the virus and on. jillian, what's up? jillian: good morning. travel restrictions on american
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service members and their families are now in effect. the pentagon banning all travel inside the u.s. starting today. the defense department says the effort is to limit potential exposure to the coronavirus. some exceptions will be made. the rule is expected to end in early may. five service members have tested positive for covid-19 in the united states. the national security council says rumors of a nationwide quarantine are false. that announcement comes after fake pictures of a supposed government plan to lockdown the country were circulated online. the national security council tweeting quote text message rumors of a national quarantine are fake. there is no national lockdown. the cdc gov has and will continue to post latest guidance on covid-19: address the covid-19 pandemic. g-7 leaders will host a teleconference later this afternoon. french president emmanuel macron says they will coordinate on
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research efforts and a global economic response. more than 153,000 people have been diagnosed with coronavirus worldwide. the biggest las vegas chains will close all hotels and casinos by tomorrow. mgm resorts will stop casino operations today. it already shut down slot machines. the company will start laying off workers next week. wynn resorts will pay employees through the shutdown. the those are your head lines. steve: jillian, thank you very much. meanwhile talk about this. it's very important the u.s. senate is getting ready to take up the house-passed coronavirus bill. what can we expect from that today? what ultimately will it look like? brian: yeah. it's not going to be as easy to pass as we thought. we will ask senator tom cotton that. ♪
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steve: the u.s. senate scheduled to convene today to passing the coronavirus health relief bill. brian: what can we expect? senator tom cotton joins us. senator, you have had a chance to look at what treasury secretary mnuchin put together with the house and backed by the white house. can you get behind it as it's read now? >> good morning, brian. i don't think the house bill is going to pass the senate as it is written for one basic problem doesn't go far enough or fast enough. there are too many gaps in coverage for the smallest businesses and for medium size businesses and i and a lot of other senators who i have spoken to over the weekend are worried we are not doing enough to get cash in the hands of affected
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workers and families quickly. we are going to be focused this week how to do just that if you have got the virus and quarantined because you have been exposed to the virus. if your business is shut down or even if you have to stay home to care for a child whose school is closed. you should not worry about buying the groceries, making the car payments, paying your rent. we are going to do everything we can to get cash into the hands of affected workers and families as quickly as possible so we can get through this epidemic -- this pandemic together. nicole: senator, my question though i'm sure a lot of people want to know if you don't vote for this bill wouldn't that be delaying getting cash into people's hands even further? >> no, nicole we can get this done pretty quickly. most of the measures in this bill are something that the senators will support, i believe. such as for instance, waiving co-pays for testing or making sure that states have adequate resources. but we worry that the bill setting up a new and complicated
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system relying on businesses, giving paid sick leave and then getting a refundable tax credit that won't move quickly enough and could put pressure on those businesses to lay workers off. we don't want to see layoffs. we want to see people at home if they have any reason to be at home supported immediately. this is an emergency measure that only needs to last for a few weeks if we all take the prudent steps necessary. that's why i think we want to use systems like say treasury refunds to anyone who paid taxes in 2018 or unemployment system or other social welfare agencies that are set up to quickly get cash into the hands of affected workers and their families. nicole: that makes sense. steve: dr. oz? dr. oz: you exklute you didn't but the house did. why that number. why not 250 or 750? >> yeah. i don't know, dr. oz. i have got to tell you i have heard from a lot of business owners across arkansas over the weekend who have more than 500
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employees but cannot afford to advance their pay if they don't have any revenue coming in. if you are a company that is totally shut down and you have to pay your entire workforce but you have no revenue coming in the door you are not going to be able to last very long. we don't want businesses to shut down after giving two weeks of leave to workers and have workers not be able to get back to their business. that's why we want to protect both affected workers and their families by getting cash into their hands convictionly but not put burdens on businesses in fact, we want to extend them support as well so they can service their debt, so they don't have cash flow problems and they will be open, viable business in a month or two which when we are through this pandemic. steve: exactly. senator, this someone of those challenges times when people look to washington, d.c. to figure a way out. there is nobody in washington concerned about the cost because this is why, you know, this is why we have taxes to pay for things like that are you
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suggesting that the bill the size it is actually going to be much bigger with a bigger price tag but people aren't concerned about that today? >> >> absolutely, steve. again, the house bill's most basic flaw it doesn't go far enough. it doesn't cover enough workers and their families. it doesn't do enough to make sure that we eliminate any financial incentive that anyone may have to be at work or other public places because they're worried about buying groceries or making the car payment or paying the rent. no one, to my knowledge, is concerned about cost in washington as we face this pandemic. again, this is a matter of just weeks or a couple months that we need to get through this pandemic. and that's why we're going to focus in the senate on getting cash into the hands as quickly as possible for anyone who has been affected by this so they will have the right incentives to stay home and care for themselves and care for their families which will be to the benefit of all of us. brian: the key will be talking instead of i have my position and the democrats have their position.
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i hope there is a sense in washington that you have got to come to an agreement today or tomorrow. the senate for some reason took the weekend off. >> brian, there is that sense of urgency. i can tell you i have spent most of the weekend on the phone talking through these challenges with my fellow senators and also arkansas business owners or the heads of departments of our state government about their capacity to move this kind of relief quickly to affected workers and families. so i don't think you see partisan squabbling over this matter what we see is trying to come together on a practical solution that can move as quickly as possible to mike sure that single momma is now home caring for a child in mount view, arkansas can pay the car payment or buy the groceries. that's what he would focused on. brian: thank you so much. >> thank you, guys. brian: is he one of the leaders.
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quarantined in japan for weeks with the coronavirus and recovered and back home. that woman joins us with her plea to americans. it is this. do not panic. bela's. from march 12 through april 1, club members receive special financing for 12 months on in-store purchases of $500 or more. visit your nearest bass pro shops or cabela's for details.
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steve: this is a fox news alert. that is pope francis walking through the empty streets of rome as hard hit itsly is locked down for the coronavirus. look at that. nicole: pontiff leaving vatican city unannounced to visit two churches to pray for the end of the pandemic. brian: earlier sunday the 83-year-old catholic church leader gave his blessing before an empty st. peters square. steve: that's right. joining us is newt gingrich. you know him. former speaker of the house to actually lives right now in rome with his wife who is the ambassador to the holy sea and newt joins us. newt, you have just written op-ed that is published in "newsweek." and you say -- you see where this could go for the united states. and you say that faced with a pandemic threat, history teaches us it is far better to be overprepared than under prepared. >> yeah. i think if you listen to dr. fauci yesterday, he said over and over again that he would rather overreact and have
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people relax later and say why did you do that than underreact and lose a lot more lives. and i think we in america can learn a lot of lessons from what's happening, particularly in northern italy. i must say that picture of the pope, calista took a copy of that and she tweeted it out yesterday. very touching that particularly when he stopped at the cross, which was carried in 1562 to ward off a plague at that time. these things have been recurring for all of human history. she has gotten a huge response on the embassy website to that picture. so touching and so stark to seat pope by himself walking up the street and the street is empty because we really are, for all practical purposes in lockdown. dr. oz: newt this is mehmet oz. is the problem they didn't social distance in time and take it seriously or the healthcare
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system that existed wasn't as good as they thought? >> no. well, it's good to -- by th by y chat with you again we have been friends for many years. i would say two things i have seen from rome. one is and i have been referring to physical distancing because the truth is you can use electronics to stay in touch with people. it's not nearly as isolated as it sounds like. so we really need to get in the habit of telling people we want you to be physically separate but stay in touch with each other. keep your morale up and remain social in electronic sense. not personally. i think two things happened here. one is they didn't move as fast f.a.a. as they should have. and this is what president trump is trying to react to, i think. when the first wave hit the small villages. i don't think anybody thought it would spread as fast as they did. that is a challenge the government has now reacted very strongly and, in fact, i would say italians are more disciplined today than i have ever read about or since the
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roman empire. it's remarkable you stand outside a store physical distance waiting for your turn to go in the stores. their stores are not empty. they're fully loaded. none of these problems of empty shelves. they have done a very disciplined good job of that second thing though that you have to recognize is, they had a pretty decent health system. particularly in italy. millan is the healthiest city in northern italy. nobody comes prepared for the scale of what hit them. i have been exploring, for example, renting some of the cruise liners that are currently unusable, move them to ventricle miss floating facilities bringing out the two navy hospital ships. northern italy is a unique epicenter for what's happening right now with that virus. it's still going up. people are still dying. and it's a serious, serious
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problem. nicole: we had surgeon general dr. jerome adams on earlier today if we don't take action now united states can be where italy was two weeks ago. >> we are at a inflection point in this country. people, we are where italy was two weeks ago in terms of our numbers. and we have a choice to makes a a nation. do we want to go the direction of south korea and really be aggressive and lower our mortality rates or do we want to go the direction of italy. when you look at the projections. there is every chance that we could be italy but there is every hope that we will be south korea if people actually listen. if people actually social distance. people do the basic public health measures we have been talking about as doctors all along such as washing your hands and covering your cough and cleaning surfaces. nicole: newt what do you think about the surgeon general's
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recommendations. >> is he perfectly right. dr. oz would agree. if we get ahead of this, take the right precautions i wash my hands 15 times a day and for 20 seconds a new hackett that i have acquired. nicole: good habit to acquire. >> be careful about how are with. i think we have every chance to be closer to south korea and to have learned a painful lesson from italy. let me say that my heart goes out to the italians because they are so he sociable people and positive people and this is a very, very big challenge. brian: all right, newt. thanks. we will see what happens. whether we are going to use our military from here on in, we will see. newt gingrich, thanks so much. >> good to be with you. brian: they have three -- they lost 369 people yesterday. single day. unbelievable. steve: dr. oz, you know, talking about we could either be italy or south korea.
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south korea is the model because they did well. what did they do? dr. oz: first off they slowed down the influx of the hospital system did that by testing earlier so you knew you you were sick. new york city the mayor told me on friday he thinks we will have 1,000 cases this week how does he think that? we already have it. we just don't know who has it. a problem young people who it was passes over in 6, 12 hours don't realize they are passing. can't social distancing for yourself who don't know are ill. nicole: all flights not just restricted areas. because they did that able to effectively quarantine immediately find their contacts and have them go in quarantine right off the bat. brian: got to get on the other side of this. three major airlines cutting flights worldwide as the covid-19 brings air travel to a stand still in many cases. we're live with reaction from tphraoeursz at one of the countries biggest airports. that story next. (whistling)
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♪ steve: the pandemic has taken a huge toll on the travel industry. united airlines cutting flights in half starting next month. brian: comes as international passengers wait in jam-packed customs lines sometimes for hours. nicole: our very own todd piro is live in newark airport with reaction from travelers. todd? todd: good morning, everybody. we just spoke with folks that landed from singapore and really two things stood out, one, customs wasn't nearly as busy as those passengers expected. at least not so far this morning. but, two, really the big thing that stood out the screening that those passengers received was not what they expected and in many cases not what they wanted. take a listen. >> entry. aside from that went pretty short. todd: give you a temperature check. >> there was not.
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met with no temperature. nobody checking us. we could have anything. it was shocking. todd: your temperature was not checked when you landed a few moments ago. >> there was nobody that paid any attention to us. todd: a much different scene awaited travelers here a few hours ago. last night people packed together waiting in customs lines. the exact opposite of the social distancing authorities are pushing. newark one of 13 airports processing travelers from overseas. meantime united announcing a cut in flight capacity by 50% in april and may while predicting those cuts would last well into the summer travel season. delta announcing reduced flights to europe including suspensions of certain routes and american reducing its international capacity by 75%. back here live, you can take a look at the big board. you see the tel aviv flight has just landed. folks walking out of customs right now. we are going to try to talk with some of those folks once we get done with this live shot. we also reached out to dhs because of this concern a number of these passengers have
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expressed wanting to be temperature-checked. we reached out to dhs this morning to find out if that is going to become part of the customs procedure. we have not yet heard back. thank you. brian: thanks, todd. steve: meanwhile with more than 3200 coronavirus cases now confirmed in the u.s., our next guest says don't panic. and she should know. brian: jorgenson tested positive for the coronavirus after vacationing in the diamond princess. nicole: she went two weeks in kwaoerpbt in japan and back home in utah. jerry joins us now. >> hi, there. nicole: thank you for calling in how are you feeling. >> i feel great. i have felt great the whole time. nicole: take us through your story. what did you experience? >> as soon as i tested negative on the cruise ship, we were kind of surprised that it was me and not my husband because he is on
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immunosuppressant drugs he has had had two kidney transplants. they took me by ambulance up to fukushima where i was in quarantine in the japanese hospital for two weeks until i got two negative results. dr. oz: jerriy your husband did connect the virus he continues to test positive. we have been telling america, american community two weeks quarantine time. how long has he been tested positive for. i understand he is being tested today. how was that result? >> yeah. he has been testing positive. i'm having a little bit of a audio problem i hope i'm answering the right question. he tested positive about three weeks ago. and it is taking him longer to shed this virus. a theory is that because is he on the immunosuppressant drugs it might be taking a little bit longer for him to shed the virus. he has not had any symptoms at
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all throughout this whole ordeal. nicole: that's great news. brian: jerryjerry jerri, you hat and you beat it? >> i didn't know i had it. i felt fine. brian: you never felt any of the symptoms? >> none. not one. nicole: that's an important message to remember. only though the majority of people only have mild symptoms there will be some that have the virus that have no symptoms at all. when which is why social distancing for everyone is important. even though you feel fine you still could be infecting those around you. >> correct. that's why we did, even after i was cleared from fukushima sheep hospital with the cdc guidelines with guidelines testing positive in the nostrils and the float. they allowed me to fly home. you are good to go. no mask or nothing. i still chose to kind of stay low for a week or so. here in my hometown just so some
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of the hysteria would die away. but there is still some stuff. i got kicked out of my gym. they are afraid of me. steve: you know, jerri, everybody watching who is concerned about the coronavirus says, man, i hope i don't get it. i just don't want to get it. you have had it. what's your message for the people who worry about the unknown? >> and i get that we are in the end now and maybe i can just share my experience on how incredibly healthy. i did pa pay late every day in fukushima. i have kids right now throughout the country that are battling the flu and are sicker than dogs and achy and coughing and they said i wish i had the coronavirus. i said well, you know, bowers i have had no symptoms. i just had to go through the quarantine. my experience it wasn't even like a cold.
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nicole: we have to remind everyone every case is different and we range from being asymptomatic and people did iing. best case is social distancing and call your physician and try to stay careful. >> take care of yourself. wash your hands and take care of yourself you will be fine. steve: that's what we do during the commercials. we go and wash our hands and come back. jerry, thank you very much for joining us again. sorry about getting kicked out of the gym and our best to your husband. >> thank you so much appreciate it. steve: dr. oz, what's coming up? dr. oz: lots of questions coming up and keep sending them to me and dr. saphier will be answering all of them. stay with us. it's a thirteen-hour flight, that's not a weekend trip.
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fifteen minutes until we board. oh yeah, we gotta take off. you downloaded the td ameritrade mobile app so you can quickly check the markets? yeah, actually i'm taking one last look at my dashboard before we board. excellent. and you have thinkorswim mobile- -so i can finish analyzing the risk on this position. you two are all set. have a great flight. thanks. we'll see ya. ah, they're getting so smart. choose the app that fits your investing style. ♪ at outback, they're for steak and beer. walkabout wednesdays are back! get a sirloin or chicken on the barbie, fries, and a draft beer or coca-cola - all for just $10.99. hurry in! wednesdays are for outback. outback steakhouse.
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♪ steve: some questions about the pandemic as more than 3700 cases are now confirmed here in the united states. brian: we have dr. oz and dr. saphier right here to answer all of your questions. let's begin, guys, i guess, dr. oz, you have the first ones from steven. at what point during the coronavirus outbreak will we begin to go back to our daily routines and resume our normal lives dr. oz: it probably a 6
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to 8 week period that's based on the experience of china. what we think we are already beginning to see in korea a weather warms the virus particles plump up don't travel as far and live as long on surfaces like this where it can last 48 hours. stay in warm climates. the rest of us over the course of next six to eight weeks we will get back in the water again and release some of these restrictions. steve: here is a great question, dr. saphier, from maureen, should pregnant women worry for themselves and unborn baby if they contract the virus? nicole: similar to the flu viral infections can infect pregnant patients as well their babies. we just had the first reported case in the youngest person to be diagnosed with a coronavirus in a newborn baby yesterday in the u.k. now, it's unclear whether the baby contracted in utero because the mother was sick. that's why she went to the hospital she had flu-like symptoms or if the baby contracted it soon after birth. as of right now we don't have evidence that there is
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transplacental carrying of it, the thought is that the baby probably contracted it during birth and soon after birth but the truth is we don't know. if you are pregnant. you want to stay in contact with your obgyn and of course if you do have any symptoms you need to call them right away. brian: go to dr. oz again. from nancy. my husband and i are ages 76 and 70. we care for our two grandchildren ages 3 and 1. is it safe for them to continue coming in our apartment every day? can we continue to watch them? dr. oz: i would really want you to reconsider what you are committed. to say at least for the safety reasons we discussed earlier the kids have to be taken care of by their patients. brian: are they carriers? kids don't get it but they can carry. >> kids can get it. we have a newborn that hats infection. we know kids get it but not symptomatic. not a single case of a child under 120 dying. those kids are everywhere. have to distance yourself from children high risk kids 70 and
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76 are in that category. you have to be thoughtful. especially if you have a chronic underlying problem. hypertension diabetes. steve: dr. saphier, so many people are stuck at home now, jim has got a question. should guy to the gym or not? i don't have any underlying symptoms that i'm aware of? nicole: jim wants to know if he should go to the gym. great question a loft people are asking that the truth is carry on what dr. oz is saying. you can actually have the infection and not actually be displaying symptoms. the point is we are trying to keep people away from other people so we're protecting the most vulnerable. so the truth is, the great news is you can actually work out in the comfort of your own home or in your own backyard. i think that people should consider not going to gyms right now because although they are wiping it down and you may take those precautions. the truth is the purpose of social distancing is to stay away from public spaces part of that is staying home. the best thing is you can always do workouts. look at them on youtube and phone there is a lot of information to help you. brian: my daughter is getting
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married this weekend in charleston, south carolina but it's outside 150 people all are healthy. what do you think, dr. oz? >> delay it. not the marriage but the ceremony do it later on. most important social corn nantz have to be delayed. brian: a lot of places allow this delay and deposit stays. everyone will be flexible. >> everyone is staying the kindness beats panic. only covenant we have is marriage. too important to throw away. 150 people aren't going to show up anyway. brian: kind of to you come in. appreciate it. thanks so much for the hour. steve: dr. saphier, brian and i will return with more "fox & friends" coming up in two minutes. no matter what i wore, i worried someone might see
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brian: all right. let's go right to a fox news alert. a shocking sight from coast to coast, major cities turned into ghost towns as new covid-19 reality is sets n. nicole: in an unprecedented move, city leaders are shutting down bars, restaurants and even schools. california's golf gavin newsome begging all residents older than 65 to stay home. steve: the cdc recommends canceling events of more than 50 people for the next two months as america grinds to a halt. brian: especially here in new york city. overnight, thousands packed disney world for the final visiting hours. hotels and stores close on friday. nicole: and as the virus
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continues to spread across the world, president trump is expected to coordinate a global response with g7 leaders today. steve: for our third hour, dr. nicole saphier joins us. can you explain to the people who are watching why the government at various levels had to, felt obligated to close restaurants and bars and schools? nicole: that's a great question, and what we're seeing is we're really trying to look at italy right now, because italy has just become overwhelmed with this infection, and the truth is that we see this could potentially happen here. when it happened with china, china had such high numbers, that was the epicenter. and so -- steve: but nobody knew what was going on, that was the problem. nicole: well, there was word that there was an unknown pneumonia-like disease starting to happen in china, but they weren't saying anything yet, and it wasn't until december 30th that they figured out it was a virus. we have to remember that the first case wasn't december 13th,
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this had been building up for some time in china. they're a densely populated area, and the government officials in china were actually telling the people this was not an infectious illness. so people were being tested and then they were being sent out. now, we had already known how infectious this was, and then italy got hit. this was during the chinese lunar new year where most people are traveling across the globe, the most busy time of the year, so that is why it has quickly spread across the globe. italy became overrun with the illness, and it's because there wasn't such strict social instancing, testing and screening happening in italy, and that has been the case in the united states, we were still having flights coming in although we had immediate travel bans which absolutely slowed down how many cases came in here. now that we see what's happening in italy and some of these other places and we continue to see such rapid rise in cases in the united states, they have to take control right now, because if they don't, we will be overrun
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with this pandemic, and we're going to be in a similar situation where things are going to have to close for much longer. if we do it now and we're strict about it, it'll be a much shorter disruption. brian: south korea and china turned the corner, and the cases got less -- nicole: they took aggressive measures right then. brian: germany says we expect 70% of our population to test positive at some point. deaths worldwide with, 5, 746. here we're at 68, i believe, with 3,200 testing positive. the only state without any sign of the virus as of now is west virginia. steve: now, and as we look at that graphic right there, i believe the number -- and it's a little far away, but the numberer in the upper right-hand corner is 77,257, i believe that's the number of people who have actually recovered so far officially. but as we had heard earlier,
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dr. sapphire, from the guest who had coronavirus, she didn't even know she had it, she had no symptoms. it wasn't until her husband tested positively that they checked her and it's like, you've got it. she didn't know it. nicole: and there are some asymptom mat you can carriers of this virus. there are a lot of people who weren't even tested who potentially had it. we had the surgeon general on earlier talking about the cdc testing and when we can expect that. go ahead and take a listen. >> we've reached a turning point. important for people to know that the cdc stood up a test in less than one week for a new virus. that was a record. but the cdc was never designed to provide hundreds of millions of tests. it was designed to respond to outbreaks. so we went from cdc testing which was slow by almost design, and then we actually stood up 83 different state labs, and you saw testing increase there. but the turning point was last thursday when the fda approved a
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new rapid throughput test which will exponentially increase the amount of tests that canning be run. brian: so the drive-through tests are available in states now, so we're make progress. but how easy it is to get to the parts that are available, i know they said cvs is and walmart are going to make themselves available, on long island they were mentioning jones beach. but the question is, how quick do you get the response. nicole: so the new test that was approved last week is a rapid, more automated response where we were having to wait 2-5 days for the results, now it's just a matter of hours. it is wonderful we're going to have adepress we've testing, so -- aggressive the testing, so we can predict how many people have the disease. the truth is, if we have all taken the appropriate precautions to be self-quarantining and everyone's kind of in their homes right now, it's not that everyone has to go out and get a test.
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especially if you're asymptomatic e. we're just trying to figure out who -- if they're symptomatic, we want to make sure those people are quarantined, getting the test. i want to encourage people, if you're not symptomatic and you're still practicing social distancing, that is the right thing for you. we don't want to overrun those systems as well. steve: and because suddenly people are going to be getting the tests, the number is going to go way up. the question is how soon will it go down. nicole: we have been saying that for a long time that the numbers are going to rise, everyone needs to not be so concerned with the numbers, the point is are we able to handle this. we're going to have more recovered than new cases, it's just a matter of taking proper precautions. steve: all right. meanwhile, the pandemic has taken a huge toll on the airline industry. united airlines is going to cut their flights in half starting next month. nicole: and it comes as international passengers wait in lines for hours. brian: todd pyro is live in
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newark, and you did start speaking to international passengers, right? >> reporter: that's right. good morning again, everybody. the latest group that we spoke to are folks coming off the tel aviv flight, and a couple things to point out, one, the wait there at customs seem to be a little bit longer according to some of my conversations whereas during the singapore flight, folks said it was about 1-2 minutes. same general point that i think the doctor alluded to, these individuals coming from overseas be it tel aviv, be it singapore expected to see more screening when they got here to the united states. more strict screening here in the u.s. take a listen to some of the folks on the singapore flight. >> the reaction in asia was very methodical, they would take your temperature, give you hand sanitizer and also check everything you had. >> reporter: so your temperature was not checked a
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few minutes ago? >> there was nobody that paid any attention to us. given that i have an autoimmune issue, it's a huge concern. >> reporter: meantime, major airlines like united, american and delta, slashing capacity on both domestic and international flights predicting they'll last well into the summer travel season. dhs said yesterday they are working on improvements, we reached out to find out the latest on that, also to find out if there's going to be a potential protocol for testing everybody's temperature come anything from international flights. we're still waiting to hear back from them. back to you. nicole: you know, the chinese have actually upgraded their technology. they already had existing facial recognition programs, but now they have equipment so they can do temperature monitoring as well. so they're monitoring everyone's body temperature as they're going throughout -- brian: yeah. they have an interesting thing of arresting the whistle-blowers, and the guy
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endses up dying. imagine if they acted responsible better on how much better off the world would be. hopefully, we reevaluate all our manufacturing within that country. steve: and the manufacturing in this country trying to keep up with the breakneck pace where people want certain things, things like chlorox wipes and stuff like that. brian bruin frosted flakes -- [laughter] steve: listen, i was at the grocery store in my town yesterday, it opened at 7:00. i was there at 7:05, and every cart was in the store being pushed around by somebody. everybody realized that yesterday was a good opportunity before everybody else showed up, but everybody in my town was awake because they needed supplies. the president has talked to the people at the grocery stores, big grocery stores, manufacturers, the supply chain. there is plenty of stuff out there, the president says, so you know what? let's calm down.
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he said yesterday. >> all of them are working hand in hand with the federal government as well as the state and local leaders to insure food and essentials are constantly available, and they'll do it, there's no shortages. we have no shortages other than people are buying anywhere from 3-5 times what they would normally buy. there's no need for anybody in the country to hoard essential food supplies. you don't is have to buy the quantities because it's hard to refill the stores on a basis as rapid as they're refilling them. and we're using the full power of the federal government to defeat the coronavirus, and we will do whatever it takes. brian: the president wants the private sector involved. he did that with the banks last week, so he's doing that yesterday, on a sunday, with target, whole foods, hy-vee, general mills, sysco, costco, publix, tyson foods and albertsons. do you have enough, and the answer is yes, i'm going to go
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out there and tell the american people, are you o.k. with that? good. because you're going to stand behind me when i say that. without the private sector, we are screwed because the federal government cannot do everything themselves. nicole: we saw that with the temp thing as well. we needed the private sector to step up with the testing like other places across the globe, and they did. steve right. but at the same time, when you go into the grocery store and there is no meat there, that is a scary thing to see, and i actually saw that at another grocery store that i was at on friday. and i said to the butcher or the guy who actually was helping the butcher, or my friend bob who works the whole store, i said, bob, are you out of meat? and he said, no, we have plenty, it's just people are coming in so fast and buying it so quickly, we cannot keep bringing it out fast enough. nonetheless, that is all part of the new norm here in the united states, and the most important thing that the federal government is trying to stress is aggressive social distancing
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which, when he was here just about ten minutes ago, dr. oz reiterated to all of us. >> the best case scenario is our public leaders are saying what hay say, which i fully endorse, we shut things down, and then they're wrong, we don't have a million deaths, we don't have a big problem. that means they did the right thing n. china when they shut wuhan down, the largest quarantine ever in humanly, 60 million people, look at the number of cases in the surrounding districts, it wasn't bad. it never got a spike. in this country we could avoid catastrophes in most of the states if the two statements on the coast, new york and california in particular, are super aggressive. but others have to jump in. steve: and that's what the white house, secretary of treasury, the house have worked out, and if the senate okays it, people at home just found out i'm not supposed to go to work, i just found out my health club has
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shut down, they shut down the building, okay, fine. that's the responsible thing to do. but where's the paycheck coming from. and the vice president said yesterday if you're sick, stay home, you're not going to miss a paycheck, this administration's going to be judged about how true that statement ends up being. we have to find a way, as senator tom cotton told us earlier, to get money to the people who, people who go from paycheck to paycheck, there is no gray area. it stopped as of friday, and it's got to -- and they've got to get some answers. that's why you have a federal government. steve: right. and tom cotton also told us he does not think the house bill's going to work the way it was crafted because it is not big enough, and it is not fast enough. but there are -- meanwhile, switching gears a little bit, we have a feeling there are a lot of people who are watching this program today who might not normally watch it on a monday morning. nicole: there are a lot of people working from home. steve: with their kids home as well. we were talking to surgeon
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general about the challenges of being in a house suddenly with your children and you're not working, and what about childcare and daycare, and he told us this -- >> every action has an equal and opposite reaction. you close the schools, you may end up forcing the kids to stay at home with their grandparents who are at highest risk. you close work and people lose their jobs, and they can't put food on the table. here's what we should do from a health point of view, here's economic consequences, here are the social con -- con senses, but we got the best people in the world really leaning into this issue. brian: 26 million kids are out of school in the united states. now, got to quickly pivot in the short term, if not this week, next week, to helping kids with their online work. how do you do that? now all of a sudden parents, if they are available because they were laid off or because they stay at home, how do you teach? how do you help your kid learn, do a lot of home schoolers do
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naturally? do you create a routine? if do you get up at 8:00? do they get dressed like they're going to school? how do you create some discipline in your own household? nicole: great question. and the reason -- you know, we were on spring break for the last two weeks, so i've been on vacation from my day job. i was supposed to be skiing right now, we decided not to go, but we're going to face the same situation a week from now. i, myself, actually have to go back to the hospital because as a health care provider, that's what i'll be doing, but my husband will be home a little bit more because they're canceling elective surgeries, and we've never had to teach elementary school kids. it's going tock a steep learning curve for a lot of people. steve: there is a bit of good news railroading this in the -- regarding this in the country of japan. it was two weeks ago japan announced they were going to be closing the schools for probably a month, and today they are reopening them after only two weeks closed. so while the federal government
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is making the plans, of course, the big concern is how long it will last. but nonetheless, you know, they are optimistic that the further we go down the road, the closer we will come to the end. nicole: the more aggressive we do right now, the shorter it will be. that's why we need -- steve: and it does hurt right now. nicole: it hurts bad. but if you do it and do it right, it's going to be much shorter than if we slow it down. brian: and teachers have to make the adjustment. all of a sudden their curriculum is going to have to go online. i don't know if they're going to do videos on their iphones or if there's something google classroom has. meanwhile, or jilluan is upstairs following the rest of the news. >> reporter: that's right. let's begin with a fox news report. a missouri police officer is shot and killed at a convenience store overnight. a gunman killed three customers and injured a fourth. the suspect also fired at two officers who were taken to the hospital. christopher walsh died from his injuries.
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he was a three-year veteran of the department and a u.s. army veteran. walsh is the 11th officer shot and killed in the line of duty this year. the navy, testing and cleaning measures after a sailor tests positive for coronavirus. this marks the first u.s. service member to be diagnosed onboard a warship. he's being quarantined at home. the warship undergoing a very thorough cleaning, anyone in close contact will be held in self-isolation at their homes. a clinical trial for a potential coronavirus vaccine will begin today. the national students of health is funding the trial in seattle. earlier the surgeon general, dr. jerome adams, said it will take more than a vaccine. >> a vaccine's not going to save the day, it'll be helpful if we can get it developedded assuming coronavirus comes back again next year and next season. but when you look at h1n1, mers,
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stars, -- sars, what helped us - >> reporter: we are told a vaccine is still 12-18 months away. send it back to you. steve: busy day. brian: meanwhile, 18 minutes after the hour, straight ahead joe biden, bernie sanders butting heads over how to handle the coronavirus pandemic in their first one-on-one debate ever in front of nobody. we're breaking down the top moments next. for example -- >> one of the reasons that that we are unprepared and have been unprepared is with we don't have a system -- >> it has nothing to do with bernie's medicare for all. one of the products i helped develop was a softer, more secure diaper closure. as a mom, i knew it had to work. there were babies involved... and they weren't saying much. i envisioned what it's like for babies to have diapers around them. that's what we do at 3m, we listen to people,
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taking center stage during the first one-on-one debate between bernie sanders and joe biden -- steve: the candidates wasted no time slamming the president's response to the outbreak. nicole: we have griff jenkins in washington, d.c. and the candidates didn't agree on much else. >> reporter: no, they didn't. they were united on bashing president trump, but they were divided, giving a contrast, but what this debate may be remembered for is that first ever elbow bump, steve, that you mentioned. of course, they then retreated to their positions. they were separated by about 6 feet, and it was in the silence of no live audience. once they started to square off in the backdrop of this pandemic, sanders' signature issue -- medicare for all -- was center stage. >> it has nothing to do with medicare for all. that would not solve the problem at all. >> we need unprecedented action right now to deal with the
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crisis. >> people are looking for results, not a revolution. >> reporter: biden did take several opportunities to go a little left on immigration, fracking and announcing his running mate would be a woman. >> there are a number of women who are qualified to be president tomorrow, i would pick a woman to be my vice president. the first 100 days of my administration no one, no one will be deported at all. no more, no new frack, no more drilling on federal lands. >> reporter: a healthy lead in the current delegate count, 890-786, but it's all eyes on tomorrow's primaries. there's 577 delegates run up for grabs in four states, and right now, guys, all four of those statements do say those contests will proceed as planned which is very interesting development considering some of the other things that are being closed. steve: indeed. and all those states is have early voting, so you've got to
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figure if you don't want to go into a school basement or something like that and touch a key pad to vote for somebody tomorrow, you probably already sent it in. nicole: and that's ooh a good point. how many people are actually going to physically be going. brian: the president tweeted out, it was a very boring debate. biden lied when he said i want to cut social security and medicare. that's all they said four years ago, and nothing happened. i will not be cutting, but they will. be careful. and the other thing is if biden runs the table, which he very well could, there's going to be so much pressure in this pandemic crisis for him to drop out is so the democrats can rally around one guy, bernie sanders to drop out, even though he's got a very passionate base. he's not going to catch joe biden, especially if he gets routed today. nicole: i think joe biden had it right last night that people want results, not a revolution. i think when you're in the midst
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of a global pandemic, people want stability, and they want to know their leaders are going to take care of them. brian: medicare for all, wait a second, they asked you about a pandemic. medicare for all is not going to get us out of this, and we don't want to rejigger our health care system in the middle of it. i don't think everybody in the pharmaceutical world are crookings. he called them, you know, crooks and thieves. that's a huge insult. steve: he does that during all of his events, but what bernie sanders said was the coronavirus has exposed the weaknesses of our health care system. he's pushing for single-payer. and then joe biden, who people were watching to see if he was alert and on his toes, and he was all too hours, he said, single-payer? they've got that in italy, how's it working out for them? nicole: health insurance does not equate to health care, and just because you want a single-payer system, that has nothing to do with the amount of doctors or the hospitals or the eventlation systems. we cannot make this political.
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just making this about politics is not right. brian: doctors can't work for minimum wage, that's what bernie sanders want them to do. meanwhile, officials urging social distancing in an attempt to flatten the curve on the pandemic, what does that really mean? dr. marc siegel is back with us, and that's what he looks like. just over a year ago, i was drowning in credit card debt. sofi helped me pay off twenty-three thousand dollars of credit card debt. they helped me consolidate all of that into one low monthly payment. they make you feel like it's an honor for them to help you out. i went from sleepless nights to getting my money right. so thank you. ♪
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♪ ♪ brian: officials from coast to coast shutting restaurants, stores and schools urging residents to practice social distancing, all part of an effort to do what health officials call flattening the curve of the pandemic. so what does this mean and why is it so important? let's put it into layman's terms with dr. marc siegel. let's look at some of these curves. "the washington post" had a pretty good map on why we should have our social distancing and what it actually means. for example, if we don't have any type of barriers, maybe what they're doing in the u.k., look at the free-for-all curve. what does that tell you? >> it has to do with how contagious the virus is, and this virus is highly contagious. for every person that has it, two or two and a half more people get it. so if you're at a bar drinking with your buddies, it's a
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free-for-all, it's going to spread from one person to two, three or more people. social distancing means sitting 6 feet away from each other, washing your hands frequently, using disinfectant. here's what i want to make sure people know, everyone's talking about asymptomatic spread. that's unusual, brian. it's when people are coughing and sneezing that this is mostly spread. it's when you're symptomatic in the early days of being symptomatic that most of the transmission occurs. is so if people are sick and they stay home or they cover their mouths and wear a mask or you stay away from them, it's not going to be transmittable. brian: there are no rules, you're going to ignore them, it's going to peak, it's going to get really high. if we show some discipline, it'll about stay the same. moderate distancing, you're kind of into it, but if you actually get everybody to get onboard, look how quick the recovery would be with. >> and i want to tell you some news no one knows. up in boston there were so many people going to concerts, we've
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cut back, they caused a huge outbreak in massachusetts that's leading to hospitalizations at the major medical centers -- brian: stopped everything. >> and that's going to help bigtime. brian: no more theaters or restaurants here in new york city. dr. siegel, last night you had a look at these trucks that are going to be going from hot spot to hot spot. >> i spoke to admiral gi are -- giroir, the number two person in hhs, and that's an even more important thing than social distancing, you know why? if we can tell who has this virus, we can have those people quarantined, that's the way to really flatten the curve. now, the admiral talked about mobile units, huge trucks, huge units with 40, 45 people working on them, health care workers, doctors, nurses in full garb, in hazmat suits with aprons that they exchange and gloves that they take off and bleach. they're going to be going to the hot spots. they're probably going to be
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able to test over 100,000 people a week after a couple weeks. that's huge because we could then find out in the community who has symptoms. and as they announced yesterday, we're going to start out with the elderly, with high risk groups and health care workers. but, brian, i'm also interested in testing young people that are sick. you know why? because they're loving with their grandmother or they're spreading it to somebody who's imknew owe-compromised. i want everyone who's symptom mat ific to be identified so we can separate them out. also good news, in the hospitals admiral giroir told me in the hospitals they're going to be starting to send to labs like quest and lab corps that now have these rapid tests, we're going to see 2-300,000 people a week in hospitals that didn't have access to testing before, plus the major medical centers. so it looks like we're finally going to get the numbers we need here. one big obstacle is this idea that doctors and nurses have to use this huge apply cater that
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goes deep into the nostril. it's possible that in a few weeks we may be able to figure out how to use a nasal swab that someone could do it to themselves. that would be a huge, huge advance. bruin brian wow. and if you made them over the counterrer, it would go real quick. >> and then we'll know how many people in the cup have it. very important. brian: right. one of the things i can't emphasize enough, even if i test positive and i feel -- i'm still not going to the hospital, right? for the most part, i can quarantine myself, correct? >> yes. you want to talk to your doctor, but i am sending nobody to the hospital because they're going to infect health care workers. no matter how much caution we use, there's no space. if you have a severe fever, if you have an underlying health condition, if you've got severe shortness of breath, if you have a very productive cough and you have an underlying condition or are very elderly, those are the people i'm going to send to the hospital. brian: all right, doctor, great
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work. thanks so much. >> appreciate it. brian: coming up straight ahead, market futures are plunging at this hour as the federal reserve slash ares interest rates to nearly zero. they were hoping for just the opposite reaction. stuart varney is on deck with what you need to know about the economic impact. (announcer) carvana's had a lot of firsts.
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and we'll make your first months payment. experience amazing at your lexus dealer. and the clock could be ticking towards bad breath, receding gums and possibly tooth loss. help turn back the clock on gingivitis with parodontax. leave bleeding gums behind. parodontax. steve: we've got a fox news alert. market futures, one hour before the opening, have plunged 1 -- 1,000 points as the federal reserve over the weekend slashed interest rates to close to 0. nicole: triggering a limit down so they cannot fall any further. brian: the dive coming as the fed cut rates by a full percentage point, we're almost at zero. they have not been this low since 2008, the financial crash led to that. rates are expected to remain
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this way until the economy recovers. so when that rate cut comes down on sunday, stuart varney, of "varney & company" which goes from 9-noon today on fbn, when that comes down, what were you thinking? they just cut rates. they did something else too. >> what the federal reserve did was, a, cut rates almost down to zero, b, inject $700 billion into the financial system. that was to make sure that the financial system didn't seize up. there's money to flow between companies and between banks. it was not really designed to prop up the stock market. there was some hope that maybe the market would be proppedded up by the fed, but what they were really doing was preventing a credit crunch. now, when the market opens this morning, you are going to see a major selloff. you limit down at the moment, that's 5%. i suspect we're going to go down 7% very, very quickly. trading will be halted for 15 minutes, then we'll get back up again. but there's nothing that i can see that's going to stop this major, major selloff today.
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steve: we did have a major, major selloff after the president announced that he was potentially going to cut off europe. you know, air travel, things like that. and we've heard over the weekend some of the administration officials say they do not think there's going to be a recession in this country, which is two quarters back to back negative growth. however, you look at what happened overnight from china, their industrial output, the lowest level in 30 years. and they've looked at how retail sales are doing in china, and the worry is that the lousy numbers there could happen here. >> that's precisely right. we are, i think, headed into a recession. i don't think there's any way around it. because if you look at the experience of china, as you reality related, in the first couple of months of this year as they were in the muddle of this crisis, industrial production went down 13%. down 13%. retail sales down 20%. steve: i'm surprised it's knotts higher. >> but if the same thing happened here, you would have a major recession bordering on
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depression with those kind of numbers. so that's the -- that's one to have reasons why the market is down so sharply this morning. and i particularly feel bad for those people who are retiring or about to retire. if they're relying on money from their 401(k) or ira, largely invested in stocks, they're probably down 25% compared to where they were four weeks ago. kno noel do you think the market will react positively or negatively once the senate passes a bill or if they can cut their own new bill? >> i don't know how the market or will react to that. what's being talked about now is helicopter money, like vast amounts of money distributed to each and every taxpayer. for example, $1,000 a month. that's being whispered about right now. bailouts for key industries, especially the airlines, maybe the cruise lines, maybe boeing, for example. so you can talk about a rescue package from the fed -- from the senate, but what you're really talking about here is a major action from the administration to stop this, to help people who
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have been drastically hurt by the virus. brian: when someone retires, to they get that 401(k) and just take it all out, or do they continue to draw from it? it's actually us is sent bl to market gyrations. >> you draw from it when you think you need it. if you've just retired and you think you need it, you're drawing down to a very low level. brian: this social distancing that we're experiencing now, we are a consumer-driven economy, unlike china. so they are a manufacturing things, and we saw that devastation. but here we are, we're about consumers, but yet we're not shopping outside food stores. what does that mean? >> so what we want is to put money in the hands of those people affected. we don't want them to go out and spend it it because they really can't if we're closing down bars, restaurants and stores. what we want is to have those people with money able to pay their rent, pay their mortgage, pay for whatever services are absolutely vital. that's what we're looking for. steve: sure. and, stuart, regarding the
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industries that you detailed like travel and cruises and airlines, you suggested a bailout, but at the same time these are businesses that are being asked by the federal government don't take anybody, don't fly anybody, so so it's not exactly -- >> i don't like the use of the bailout, even though i used it. ten years ago we bailed out banks, and they got themselves into trouble. brian: we ended up getting that money back. >> we did. but this time around we're talking about rescuing industries which are down through no fault of their own. as you say, steve -- nicole: that's very important. we've been told that the airlines should stop this service. and there's a very important distinction between the bailouts of the past and what i would call the rescues of the present. brian: and that was part of the debate last night, and they did bring up -- listen, we didn't do the t.a.r.p., we didn't do the bailout, the little person would have paid the price in 2008. >> i'm sorry to say i found that
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debate utterly irrelevant. we're going into a -- brian: that's true, but the point was taken. >> again, we're going into a major leagues recession. if you want to stand up there and talk about, oh, we're going to tax the rich and reregulate the oil industry, but we're going to tax the society at a time when we're going into a recession, a severe recession, that's utter nonsense. that's economic nonsense. brian: all right. >> in my opinion. [laughter] steve: stuart, thank you very much for working the couch yesterday on "fox & friends". >> it was a pleasure. thank you, much. brian: meanwhile, jillian, you're working the full screen. >> reporter: yes. the remains of an army specialist killed in iraq now back on american soil. a dignified transfer held at dover air force base in delaware. juan manuel mendez was killed in a strike the along with staff sergeant marshall roberts and a british service member. the u.s. plans to reposition some troops out of iraq as iraqi
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security forces see success in their fight against isis. the coronavirus hit some of our nation's top law enforcement agencies. the head of the nypd's transit bureau reportedly tested positive for covid-19. according to "the new york post," he comes into contact with hundreds of officers every day. in los angeles a police officer at lax airport and a supervisor with the lapd both test positive. they are the first persons in the agency with the coronavirus. country superstar the martina mcbride sets up to help nashville in crisis, she's using a gofundme page to raise money to feed the community that's now recovering from tornadoes and facing the coronavirus are outbreak. >> you know, you get down to it, that's what's important about being human and humanity, is being willing to step up and help your neighbor. >> reporter: mcbride hopes
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to give groceries to people in the music and tourism industry which is suffering right now. those are your headlines, back to you. steve: jillian, thank you very much. meanwhile, with schools closing coast to coast in some parts and millions of americans forced to work from home, how can you make sure that you maintain productivity? we're going to get pro advice from an online learning expert next. brian: all right. i want to check in with ed henry, find out what he's going to be doing over the next three hours with sandra smith. ed: we are looking forward to welcoming, actually, dr. saphier to join us to answer your questions. we're also awaiting a live update from president trump's coronavirus task force as we break down every part of this critical story. maria bartiromo here, and the federal reserve takes dramatic economic action, also a look at the impact on first responders. a firefighter in new york city tests positive, we'll talk to
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the fdny union president on how we keep our firefighters, our police, our doctors, our nurses all safe at this critical time. join us, nine to noon. people ast sort of person should become a celebrity accountant. and, i tell them, "nobody should." hey, buddy. what's the damage? i bought it! the waterfall? nope! a new volkswagen. a volkswagen?! i think we're having a breakthrough here! welcome to caesar's palace. thank you. when i get my teeth cleaned, my hsomething like this. she cleans with something like this. it's got a round head. and it's got power. go pro with oral-b. power one on for oral-b's best clean ever. inspired by dentists. oral-b's round brush head surrounds each tooth to remove more plaque along the gum line.
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americans turning their homes into temporary classrooms and work spaces as schools and companies shut their doors. nicole: right now at least 64,000 schools are closed, and it's estimated that nearly half of businesses are immaterial -- implementing work from home policies. steve: how can you maintain productivity? joining us right now, an online learning expert with tips. >> good morning. steve: okay. i see you are coming to us from your home. >> my home office, absolutely. brian: there you go. >> along with most of america. steve: indeed. most of america is waking up today, the country has changed because so many people are at home with their children today for a variety of reasons. if they get a assignments over the next couple of days on what they should do with schoolwork and what not, how do you suggest that they order their day? >> it's a fantastic question. connections academy, of which i'm the cofounder, has actually been doing full-time online learning, students learning from home for about 20 years, so
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we've learned a few things along the way. and a couple of things, the first thing i would say is that in some ways the fact that students and parents are home together in this really nerve-wracking time is a bit of a blessing, because for children, the safety and security of home makes up a lot of difference when they're in unsettled situation in terms of school. so that's the first thing, is that you've got this, families. this is something that you do on a regular basis. we can help you kind of make it through. i think the most important thing for parents is to know that they know their children, they have a ph.d. in their children when it comes down to it, and so scheduling the day around how their children learn is going to go a long way to making this a successful learning from home experience. and there's a few practical tips that we can offer to make that just a little bit easier. nicole: why don't you tell us some of those tips since you've within doing this -- been doing this now for two decades, and
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parents like myself would appreciate that. >> sure. some of it is really simple which is, you know, schedule the day out. especially if yourselves also working at home, figuring out a way to break the day into chunks, 30-50 minutes at a time, knowing when you can take a break from your work to attend to your child and vice versa, when they know to stay away from the camera because you're on a video call with a customer. setting those ground rules and agreeing on that in advance really a huge step towards making this work. checking in on a regular basis with both your child but also your child's teacher. most schools that are sort of in an unplanned and somewhat hurried way having to go to school from home have teachers set up to be able to be with those students via e-mail, text -- brian: right. and just real quickly because we're up against a break, you say create a schedule and dedicate a learning space. >> yes. brian: you don't want to be doing it at 9:00 at night.
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organize to 30-50 minute schedules and help students keep social ties with others. i guess there's a time for everything still. >> right. absolutely. and i know for parents that are concerned about screen time, breaking up the day that way and having kids take breaks is really important. and then also making sure they get to connect with their friends either virtually or in person. steve: thanks for sharing some screen time with us. >> thank you. and good luck to everybody out there. we all need it. the all-new silverado hd
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>> dr. saphire thanks for doing this. can you join me on radio? >> absolutely. >> you will join ed, and be in the one o'clock special. >> that's right. >> fox news alert closing schools and restaurants from costa rica. curving the spread of the coronavirus. i am sandra smith. >> i am ed henry. 3700 cases of covid-19 in the united states. the death toll rising to 68. shoppers finding empty shelves. americans returning from overseas waited for hours for screening. >> sandra: dr. fauci warning a nationwide lock down is a real possibility. >> we have to fake the fact and be realistic.
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