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tv   The Five  FOX News  April 4, 2020 2:00am-3:00am PDT

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one month ago super tuesday a lot of change has happened last month. land of the free, home of the brave. we will get through it. a sorry ray, out of time. fox news at 19. >> this is a fox news alert, democrats reacting with outrage late tonight as the president's fire the intelligence community inspector general. he was the official who told congress about the anonymous whistle-blower complaint that helped set off the event leading to president trump's impeachment. tonight, america is given a new way that we can help stop the spread of the coronavirus. some call it a pivot from what they said weeks ago. it's necessary while out in public. the president calls the guidance and voluntary, he's not going to follow it himself in the oval office, and the fact that it's voluntary is key, that's a
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point of contention for a number of leaders who think the administration should be much toaster stomach tougher and nationwide lockdown they are wearing tracking devices after refusing to stay home. the land of the free balancing civil liberty restrictions in the middle of a pandemic. charlie goes check it out. clearly alive and well especially in the race to create a vaccine. the university of pittsburgh medical school news tonight about a potential breakthrough, one of the doctors joins us in minutes. welcome to fox news at night, i'm chanting in washington. kicks off on the very latest on guidance for coronavirus task force. it eco-someone sitting in the hope will >> i think wearing a face mask as a great president, prime
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ministers, dictators, kings, queens, i don't know, somehow i don't see it for myself. >> thinks, but no thanks. that's the president's personal position on wearing a protective mask during the coronavirus pandemic purity today he did back the senate's for disease control recommendation. when they can't maintain social distancing guidelines. >> it can spread between people interacting and close proximate e. if, for example, coughing, speaking, or sneezing. even if those people were not exhibiting symptoms. >> that guidance comes from a fierce debate over exactly who should get personal projected gear today the president again announced his intention to invoke the defense production act, keep much of that material right here at home. >> secretary of homeland security will work with them to prevent the export of the surgical masks and other personal protective equipment, we need these items immediately
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for domestic use, we have to have them fear to speak of the order was the backdrop of an ongoing dispute between the white house and 3m, at the manufacturing giant who has been criticized for spending much needed masks abroad, leaving some states here at home unable to protect health care workers. it can charge the company rigorously denies. if they were overshadowed today by the jobs report which saw the u.s. economy shed 701,000 in march, push the unemployment rate to 4.4%. >> now to our breaking news, once again at fox news washington we have learned that the president has fired at the intelligence community's inspector. it you may remember that it was atkinson who sparks the impeachment of the president, when he circumvented a decision by his boss and then told congress what you thought was a "urgent complaint about the
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presidents communication with ukraine" that was leveled by a cia operative, working inside the white house. in the letter tonight the president said he no longer has the fullest of confidence in atkinson, and will remove him from his duty effective 30 days from today. as you can imagine, democratic reaction to the decision has been swept, this from adam schiff tonight, the cat the congressman from california. yet another blatant attempt by the president to cut the independence of the intelligence community and to retaliate against those who dare to expose presidential wrong doing. >> very interesting timing to, i should point this out, mark meadows is now than new white house chief of staff. you might wonder how that would play out in this decision for the president to remove michael atkinson who made a number of very curious decisions on the job including some complaints about backdating forms, et cetera, again michael and stomach atkinson has been relieved of duty by
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president trump quite a way to begin our friday night. >> yeah, it feels like a friday night in washington. this often happens, we kind of forgot that amidst the covedic craze. thank you. mission of mercy and comfort being reassessed tonight at issues, the decision to have the hospital's shifts restrict their patient mode to noncovid-19 cases only. we have the very latest from new york city. >> good evening, with all the bad news we keep hearing across the country and in new york, we wanted to start out with some more uplifting and powerful imaging that we are connecting here outside of the hospital earlier this evening. new york city's fire five are gathering to pay their respect and love and support for the front-line workers, the doctors, the nurses, the medical professionals on the front lines of this war on coronavirus. the firefighters flashing
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lights, blowing sirens, applauding, saying thank you to those front line of medical workers sacrificing their service. >> depending on tonight offering some hope for overloaded, reversing policy and announcing that the temporary hospital will now accept covid-19 patients with some 3,000 votes available now reassessing whether to allow the comfort in new york and the sisters stomach sister ship to accept coronavirus cases. they were here to sandal to handle a gun, the chairman is reassessing their mission tonight. we now have more than confirmed cases of coronavirus. more than 57,000 cases, and a total death in new york, 20 9:30
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five, approaching 3,000 deaths now in this state he is signing an executive order to send national guard crew to hospitals and medical centers, to grab the ventilators. and redeploy them to other parts of the state where they are needed critically. >> shannon: we are going to talk about the legality of that, too. if on the ground for us they are in new york, thank you. the death toll in the nation topping more than 1,800 tonight. paramedic megan pfeiffer telling us what she's actually seeing out there on the front lines of the pandemic. first of all, the stakes of the nation are with you, you are going out and doing is truly heroic, let us start by saying thank you. also, tell us the reality of what things are like for you on the job right now. >> i just want to thank you guys
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for that acknowledgment, it really is appreciated. all the things that we've been getting from everybody, it is unreal out there right now. as unlike anything i've ever seen before. i've been doing this for over ten years now, there's a lot of very sick people, and we don't have what we need to take care of them. >> shannon: and i know for you, you are also thinking about your family and friends, you were self isolating, you just don't leave your workplace, you sleep there. i imagine you're not getting any and stomach mental or emotional break >> i've been working as much as possible, keeping myself busy, i've lost a lot of my outlets. it's been a bit concerning for myself as well as other people. paramedics are sleeping in cars, i slept at the station for a few nights, fortunately they put us in a hotel now. so i do have a place to go, but it still breaks my heart that -- i really just want to go home,
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and it can't. >> shannon: i want to play something for my fellow emt of yours in new york, talking out about the conditions that you guys are facing daily. >> it's overwhelming, i've actually been in a war zone, it is a pretty good analogy, this, you can't mitigate it. it's kind of like -- consumes you. it's everywhere. i've welled up in tears, when we take someone's loved one out of their home, we literally just take their loved ones, and oftentimes they will never see them again alive. these people will most likely die alone. it's profound sadness. >> shannon: so megan, how do you manage the emotional weight that you're carrying along with the physical what you're doing as well? >> honestly, it's been really difficult. very difficult. i've had nights where i've been bawling crying all night, i've been having anxiety attacks, we do have each other, they are
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offering counseling, but i think we are still really in the thick of it right now. it's kind of hard to actually really process, we are going to need some time and try to do what we can and stick together, help as many people as we possibly can. it really is a battlefield out there right now. >> shannon: we've been reading reports that there is guidance to emts in the area saying basically, if someone is in cardiac arrest and can be revived in the field, please don't take them to the emergency room. it did you ever think you would have to be making decisions like that? >> absolutely not. we do have everything that we can do in the fields of paramedic, pretty much what the hospital is doing. we are also leaving people at home, they are still sick. on an ordinary day, they would need medical attention. we just don't have the space for
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all of them, they are advising us to stay home. we are not really taking them into hospital into they are critical they are so far into it at that point. >> shannon: it do you all have the ppe that you need, if not, what do you need? >> we really need to more and 95 masks. they are following, but right now it's recommended to wear n and 95, which is more protective masks, if we are doing cpr, incubating a patient, or if we are doing a nebulizer treatment they suggest that just a regular mask is sufficient for that. i really don't think it is, i don't want to take that chance. we've been reusing masks to try to be able to protect ourselves.
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we want to megan pfeiffer, really this country, everyone they are living in your area owes you a debt of gratitude. we can't really repay you. we thank you, please know that there are people all over the world who are praying for you and for your safety every day. to thank you so much for what you are doing. >> thank you, thank you guys. >> shannon: god bless. new advice is a coronavirus analyzes new data. think about wearing a mask or piece of cloth when we go out in public. the new guidance comes between people interacting in close proximity. even if the people are not exhibiting symptoms, may be sick, marc siegel joins us now. great to have you, you are a leading voice on this in the very beginning. at what do you make of this new recommendation that we try to
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cover our faces when we are out in public. how much can it help, either right or wrong way for us to do it? >> those are both fake questions, this all comes from a new study called nature medicine which shows that you actually can spread this by speaking, even. a much more easily than we thought, when you're a symptomatic period of us of the patience of taking care of, it looks that way. it so easily from one person to the next, that it brings a question, you could have it. you could not know it. he could be spreading it by speaking, coughing, sneezing, not knowing it. 6 feet may not be enough, so the covering comes into place. ideally, that would be a surgical mask. it that you'd have a tight seal on, you could get rid of it when it gets wet or dirty. the problem is we don't have enough of those. we need those for health care workers. we can't say use those, so if we don't have enough of those, that's what i really want.
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we have the cloth masks, those that you make yourselves, they are not as good, they don't have it's going to shield, and decrease the spread. that plus the social distancing is a good combination. >> shannon: and there still questions tonight that are growing about where this came from, the fact that we didn't know how contagious it was. it china was not sharing everything they knew early on. here's something that dr. fauci said today about the fact that their reports would market with the animals that may have been the genesis of this, at least the carrier of it. if they are back up and running. here's dr. fauci. >> i think they should shut down those things right away. i mean, it's boggling my mind. when we have so many diseases that emanate out of that unusual human animal interface, that we don't just shut it down. i don't know what else has to happen.
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>> shannon: what we've heard of, this isn't what we're experiencing right now. if that's not the first epidemic or pandemic that seems to have been trance to trace back to these markets in china >> these markets have very close contract between animals and humans. do you need to know that these viruses are endemic in mammals. all different kinds of mammals, they are in these markets. at the ones we are worried about right now are bats. we are talking about sars coming from a back, another coronavirus from the back, this one looks like it started in the back. ads tend to have viruses that when they jump to humans, they get us very sick. but the question is, was there an intermediary mammal, because we don't think looking at the electron microscope that it's exactly the same as the bad virus. it's a little different. was there intermediary mammals? a penguin was brought up.
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it's not been proven to be the intermediary. some said it was a camel. we don't know what exactly happened here. some question marks are starting to come back, but it does look like it started in in the back,t least. >> shannon: at dr. siegel, we think you always for your expertise, we know that you know a lot about these pandemics, thank you for joining us, thank you for having >> thank you shannon. >> shannon: how far will america have to do go to the spread? steve weinberg are medical expert is here to weigh in on and answer your que road-trip companion. it's kind of my quiet, alone time. audible is a routine for me. it's like a fun night school for adults. i could easily be seduced into locking myself into a place where i do nothing but listen to books. i never was interested in historical fiction before, but i'm obsessed with it now.
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>> shannon: at the trump administration's new billion-dollar lids new business they didn't have enough time to brace for the volume of applications. they are tracking the very latest on this big story. >> who would've thought they'd be giving away hundreds of billions of dollars could be so hard. it's actually proving quite difficult for our government, at least on day one, websites are crashing, banks aren't ready to lend. some small businesses are confused, which in ordinary times, would be troubling, perhaps paired with the american economy hanging by a third, it is a rough start. >> they are working around the clock, our banking partners are really incredible. they are ensuring that the money gets to small businesses as quickly as possible, and then the small business intern take care of employees. >> the paycheck protection program allows for small businesses to borrow government money to make payroll, rent, and
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other expenses. if they don't lay anybody off, at some point, that loan gets forgiven. president trump tweeted this morning, great job done by bank of america and many community banks throughout the country. america's largest banks like citi, chase, and wells fargo, weren't ready to take applications. bank of america open their website for loans, and got trashed on super to social media they tell me online but i'm not eligible to apply because i've never been old loan with them disappointed. bank of america says 85,000 customers apply for 22 billion in loans, but tonight, the treasury department tells fox news they've only guaranteed loans for $5.4 billion to more than 17,000 businesses across every bank in america. john paddock owns the
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golf course maintenance equipment. >> i talked to my banker every other day for the past three weeks. >> he's working to get a loan to save his nine employees. >> i think a lot of the people are in the same boat. we got to get rolling again within a month. if i can imagine what it would look like after a month from now now. >> the so many small business owners say they needed that government help, but right now, they just can't get it. >> there's a lot of red tape, a lot of documentation that has to come together. we can only pray they streamline that system as soon as possible. thank you. tonight, the president is under fire for sticking to a federalist system, giving states enormous power over their own decisions. they resort to increasingly drastic measures. also tonight, they put the
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nation under lockdown. they've been more reluctant to do it. >> tremors through our business community, through our country. basically, what are you doing? you are talking about, you're going to nationalize an industry, you are going take away companies. >> i signing an executive order saying we can take ventilators and ppe from institutions appeared >> telling those who wouldn't curb their activities, no, you must belong with the rest of society, that is the right thing, even though it's extremely painful. it's unheard of. >> shannon: former medical director joins us now. good to have you back with us. >> think you shannon. >> i want to start with some of
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the controversy that surrounded 3m. we had a number public officials, we had one from florida last night who came forward to say i've been trying and chasing these mats for these months, i can get that three i'm saying there's a problem with our distributors. if i want to play something from the ceo of 3m. >> the idea that 3m is not doing all it can to fight price gouging and unauthorized reselling is absurd. an area that we are not doing everything we can to maximize delivery, respirators in her home country. we are doing everything we can to maximize our efforts, fight covid-19. >> this is what peter navarro told tucker carlson about 3m. >> you have to stop whining and spending, just do the business the american people. it's exhausting to work with these people. we don't have the hours, much
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less the minutes to deal with it. of >> shannon: and taking more of this supply line? >> he did, with the defense that he signed, he talks to people at 3m, he has taken -- he has not nationalized any of the companies, but he certainly let them know that they were and an american company. it wasn't always 3m, it was minnesota mining and manufacturing, not china. it's minnesota mining and manufacturing. americans have big hearts, when we fill all the needs in this country for a 95 masks, i hope that 3m and other people can sons them all over the world to wherever they're needed. right now we need them here. it might be a while before i buy any more scotch tape post-it notes. >> shannon: okay, if you don't
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mind me asking, i know that you were in the hospital briefly this week as a patient yourself. it tell us about what it's like. did you have any hesitations going in knowing the cobit situation going on >> none at all, i went to a top hospital, top teaching hospital in dallas. it's where the medical school is. i know it well, drove up. do you go inside to the emergency room, if you have symptoms of cobit, 9 stomach fever, they have a mask. you are 20 feet at least away from every other patient. when you go to the floor, all of the staff has a mask. they have a mask. they are going to the very top floor with no axis other than the people who work there. i felt extremely safe, i think
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most hospitals today are taking those kinds of precautions. if >> we are glad that you are back, i hope that you're feeling better. i'm going to get a couple of viewer questions. it is comes from kayla saying help, i'm a lupus patient, i cannot find my medication anyway. i rely on as a life-saving maintenance drug, are we going to be put last now, scared, of course this is one of the drugs that is potentially being helped for cobit patients what you say to her? >> i feel terrible, the squeaky wheel gets the grease, it usually works. i suspect she's tried her major pharmacy, walgreens, cvs, around her town. i would try the mom-and-pop's. the small drugstores often have drugs that the big ones run out of. i think i know where she can get us apart. she has a rheumatologist as her primary doctor, he or she is probably in a group of other
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rheumatologists. they probably have a supply of this drug available in their office, if they don't, they will get it. i don't know any dr. who would let his or her patient suffer because they couldn't get a drug. those rheumatologists they will turn over every single leave. >> shannon: that's got to be a scary situation. to steve, glad you are on the med telecommand. >> shannon: feels kind of like velcro, potentially a big breakthrough from the school of breakthrough from the school of meopen road and telling peoplehe that liberty mutual customizes your insurance, so you only pay for what you need! [squawks] only pay for what you need.
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>> shannon: another promising avenue to explore tonight, a way
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to stop covid-19. the university pittsburgh school of medicine announcing a potential vaccine breakthrough. the medical school dr. lu fay low, great to have you with us what can you tell us, everybody is anxious to hear some good news, where you guys in this process? we know it takes a long time. >> thanks for inviting me. the vaccine that we are developing is a basic protein subunit vaccine, much like traditional flu vaccines. the target for this vaccine is a protein on the surface of the virus that's essential for the virus to enter human cells. our idea was that we could make antibodies against that protein, we could prevent viral entry into cells, therefore avoid the disease. we took that very small protein, and repackaged it in a novel delivery system that is called a micro needle over a period that micro needle array is actually,
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you can think of it as a band-aid. except that it has hundreds of very small needles. so microneedles, about the size of a human hair, about the length of a little over a half a millimeter. these needles actually are made of a type of sugar which very readily dissolves when it's exposed to fluid. what we do, essentially, is makes a protein that we have it the antigen with the sugar, and then solidify it. the needles easily penetrate the top layers of the skin, once they are in the skin, they dissolve, release the antigen into the most immunogenic part of the skin. >> shannon: it feels a little bit like velcro, i understand. the feeling you would have with the little sticky things sticking out, want to read something from the independent talking about what you guys have done. if the scientists were able to act quickly because they already had laid the groundwork during
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earlier epidemics. sars in 2003 , and another in 2014. how did those earlier cases help you go to fast track what you are doing now question mike >> i am very fortunate to work with the terrific scientists. he is an expert vaccine knowledges, has been working on it for several years, back in 2,003. the advantage we had was that we had developed a whole series of tools including protein structures that made it very easy for us to -- once the new sequence of this coronavirus was out, we were able to take the small sequence that we were targeting and inserted into the constructs that we had already made, we had all of the systems prepared to to test the vaccine in animals. we were able to move this very quickly from sequence released to animal studies, that showed promising antibody responses. >> shannon: i understand the testing has gone on with mice, correct me if i'm wrong, but
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where does that put us on the timeline to then human testing, mass production, and so on. >> the studies have been very promising, we are now in the process of applying for what's known as an investigational new drug application to the fda. that process has a variable length of time, could be weeks, could be more than that, could be a month. once it's approved, we are ready to go with the vaccine. we can start clinical trials immediately. if these would be phase one safety trials, as dr. fauci has subject several times, once you get into the actual clinical testing, the process can take a year to one year and a half. but of course, these are very different times. we are hoping, depending on how the vaccine progresses, how safe it is, and what kind of responses it shows early on, that we may be able to accelerate that process.
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>> shannon: it's the world is cheering you want, and all the others in this vaccine race. we wish you the very best, thank you for explaining. >> thank you. >> shannon: okay, next, come to judge a force you to wear a tracking device if you've got covid-19, or someone that you live with, and you won't stay home? home? we are going to tell i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424. and i like to question your i'm yoevery move.n law. like this left turn. it's the next one. you always drive this slow? how did you make someone i love? that must be why you're always so late. i do not speed. and that's saving me cash with drivewise. my son, he did say that you were the safe option. and that's the nicest thing you ever said to me. so get allstate. stop bossing. where good drivers save 40% for avoiding mayhem, like me.
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>> shannon: in kentucky to coronavirus patients under family member have been ordered to wear tracking devices at the rhode island border, the national guard is stopping out-of-state drivers. they are ordered to take the axis ventilators from upstate hospitals. civics discussion in the time of coronavirus, washington times legal reporter, and former deputy assistant general.
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welcome to both. i want to start with a kentucky case. this is from the courier journal journal. telling them to self isolate, they say to louisville coronavirus patients have been ordered by circuit judges to isolate and wear tracking devices after health officials learns they've been in public against medical advice. what you think? >> it's never been to this supreme court, i think it's going to be upheld as legal. the reason why is this, states using their power to protect public health and safety are what we called police power. they can quarantine people who might have the coronavirus and to detain them. it's less intrusive to allow people to quarantine at home, as long as an exchange, they wear one of these devices. compared to parole. parolees sometimes have to wear these devices because the state says you can leave prison early, but you're going to have to be monitored in various ways.
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it's a good deal for the prisoner, it's good deal for the prison. it's a better deal for people who have the coronavirus to be able to quarantine at home then be sent to some kind of center, it's better for the government to keep an eye, it's important to know the location of where people are who are sick, target treatment, prevent them from moving around and getting other people sick. threatening other stomach public health and safety. >> shannon: the fact that google is providing tracking and information, these people are having to wear tracking information. where's the balance in your opinion? >> it's difficult, i do agree that, in times of emergency, courts are very deferential to estate executives. this pandemic it certainly would qualify for that. i think that there's a question, though, when we talk about parolees and people who wear tracking devices usually, ordered by court. there are usually charged and convicted with a crime, here you have no crime. the state of kentucky, it's not
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a misdemeanor to violate the quarantine. there are other states that make it a misdemeanor, i think that's one argument against civil liberty folks to bring forward. our court precedent does generally side with the state executives. it would be in upheld crime, that's for sure. >> shannon: and the sage words of dr. charles, who wrote about this in the context of a bullet in 2014, quarantine is the ultimate violation of civil liberties, having it done no wrong, you are sentenced to house arrest or banishment, it's unfair, but he says, it's something that has to be done in these emergency times. he says it's un-american, but when an epidemic threatens, we do it because we must. he would hear both of your arguments there, and pulled them both into his statement. i want to talk about the situation up in new york where governor cuomo says, well, i'll let you hear what he says,
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that's the way it's been characterized. he plans to sign an executive order to give the state the power to take equipment from private hospitals, nursing homes, and other facilities because he wants to take stuff where it's an access, and bring it back to where they need it. your saw the governor response to that. >> i don't use the word sees, i didn't use that word. that's a harsh word. it's a sharing of resources. we are going to share resources. we are not going to have any part of the state that doesn't have the resources they need it, we didn't share resources. >> shannon: and appropriate use of this power, if the governor can get the resources where they are most are most needed by taking them to private institutions, yes or no? >> it's doesn't remember if you retort the call, under the constitution, the skull the taking. if the government is
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commandeering the private property of somebody for public purposes. the governor has the right to take the ventilators for personal protective equipment and ship it somewhere. at the state has the police power, gives us the right to protect public health and safety in this public emergency. the constitution has are taking that requires the state to pay just compensation when it takes a private property. yes, governor cuomo can take this equipment, and he can move it to new york city. he's going to have to pay the market rate for all of that equipment to those private hospitals. that's going to be an expensive bill. >> shannon: quick final word to you? >> i covered at the press conference today, i think i used the word confiscate, he would have an argument against that. he did mention that he was reimbursed where he took the ventilators from. return them once are done.
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i think it was congresswoman elise stefanik about the concern in her district where she has a lot of elderly individuals. when the peak it says, are we going to have it back? >> shannon: if there's a lot to balance there. thank you for two legal experts, have a great weekend you guys. >> thanks shannon. >> thank you. >> shannon: most of you out there feel like it's been a long week, good news, my friend is here to save the day with a bit announcer: wash your hands...
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avoid sick people... and touching your face. there are everyday actions to help prevent the spread of respiratory diseases. visit cdc.gov/covid19.
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♪ >> shannon: here at fox news at night, we do our best to bring some good news before we say good night. tonight someone who specializes in finding the best in all of us. it neurologist, welcome back >> happy friday. >> everybody is happy it's friday. a lot of people stuck at home, the days are all running together. it it brings me to my first story, i love this, this is a dog who is keeping people socially distance because he's delivering wine. j.d., what should we know about this guy? >> this is soda pop, this is a
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winery and maryland that you and i are going to go visit when all of this is over, and this dog brings the wind to you, to the car, so you make your order, and soda pop comes out with his little wine, thing he is the best it dog week. >> shannon: he is so cute, they take very good care of him, he doesn't carry more than two bottles of time. he's good. something near and dear to your heart, your house, the fdny giving a standing ovation to new york city health care workers, it's a beautiful thing, look at this, these guys and gals lined up out there. if they are hewers to, yet they are thinking other people and praising them as heroes. >> i love it, healthy heroes, and the fdny lined up today outside of new york city's hospital on the shift change for the workers of the health care workers. a beautiful moment that i'm so
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glad that we could show you tonight. >> shannon: i love it, really, both sides could be cheering for each other. they are both right in the middle of this whole thing. we also want to show, we don't have enough about the cobit patients who recover. we've had a few on the show, there really a lot of them out there , this is a send-off, in austin for a patient there who had been very ill on a ventilator for at least ten days. she had been there much longer. here's a hospital actually giving her a goodbye, she was overwhelmed, they were overwhelmed, so happy to send her home, now fully recovered. beautiful. >> i love the story, we need to see more of them, because people are recovering, it's just a great show of emotion from the health care workers that helped this woman survive and live. >> i think by looking at her too, she was so emotional, thinking she should be thanking them, they wanted to give her a big send-off. she was in her 40s, someone who is on the younger and of overseeing with a very serious patient, she had a very rough
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time, but she made it through. okay you and i have been trading some bible verses, posting them, finding comfort in them, do you have one you want to share? >> i do, you shared this one with me this week, i had my father in that stomach lob pass away it gives me hope and a gray of light. i want to share with you tonight. it's a lord is close to the brokenhearted, saves those crushed in spirit. it really helps me. i wanted to share with people that might be feeling down or have a sick relative, and sometimes just a verse will help you bring you hope. >> shannon: it yet, we are praying for you guys, it's been a rough week. so many out there that are losing folks. let each of you not only look out for your own interests, but the interest of others. i think it's one of the best ones we can remember right now. so many people around us need help, they need love, they need
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encouragement, let's take care of ourselves, take care of each other. good to see my friend. >> love you shannon. i love you. >> i love you too. most . .
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♪ >> cdc is advising the use of nonmedical cloth-faced covering as an additional voluntary public health measure. so it's voluntary. pete: welcome to "fox & friends" on this saturday morning and we begin with a fox news alert. president trump announcing new cdc recommendations on face masks. americans now urged to cover their faces with nonmedical cloth. it's voluntary as coronavirus cases grow across the u.s. >> president trump says he will not be wearing a mask as the voluntary at this point. todd: covid-19 surpassing 1 million at this time. more than 270,000 of those here

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