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tv   The Ingraham Angle  FOX News  April 15, 2020 11:00pm-12:00am PDT

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♪ >> sean: all right, that's all the time we have left this evening, we will never be the media mob. >> sean: will never be the media mob ever. keep your family safe. lett not your heart be troubledt laura ingraham. by the way, i saw some idiot riding, we need to put a news person in laura's slot. no, laura has record ratings, a loyal audience for this is your hour. you aren't going anywhere. or we are going out together. you, me, tucker. >> laura: now is the three musketeers prayer there was a time where prime time wasn'tni always as friendly, hannity. but we actually really like each other. >> laura: i'm >> sean: i'm reading this, i don't haveve a beef with the writers. i've got one idiot over at "the washington post," wants me dead.
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he's a stalker. every second of everyf day. we all have that. you've got humpty dumpty the stalker. we've got stalker is everywhere. >> laura: justice thomas once said to me, you know, when people are talking smack about you, it's usually 90% of it based in jealousy. let's leave it right there,y, hannity. fantastic show tonight. >> sean: laura goes, i go. we all go out together. >> laura: i will be in the trenches with you any day, hannity. no problem. i'm laura ingraham and this is "the ingraham angle" from washington tonight. president trump no hinting and even earlier partial reopening of the country, hud secretary ben carson will tell us what that looks like. edfox news has learned details about what china has been hiding about how this coronavirus thing really started. senator josh hawley has been a leader from the start and now wants to hold them accountable.
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he's going tom tell us how that would go down. why is it that nancy pelosi doesn't have time to approve small e business relief but she somehow has time for late-night comedians? raymond arroyo has that and more in seen and unseen. first, america and shut down, day 30, if you can believe it. america's death toll surpasses 30,000 people tonight.ht but even with that staggering number and all the loss of life that comes along with that, there was some good newsws toda. >> it looks like we are heading absolutely in the right direction. with almost a few exceptions, you have every state that is either doing better or on the way to doing better. >>r over the last 55 and six days, we've seen declines in cases across the country and this has been very reassuring for us. >> in terms of our cases,
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hospitalizations, vents being utilized, they are trending in the right direction. we've certainly flatten the curve. >> no change in hospitalizations, down, that's good news. i see you admissions down, that's good news. intubations are down, that's very good news. >> laura: i just smiled. we needed this goodee news. the original models were very long and a lot of people have been social distancing and other things are happening as well, get that later in the week. amazing but look at this new york chart for daily hospitalizations. that's a beautiful thing. look at where it's going. that's after such a brutal six weeks in the city. remember, it was just three weeks ago that "the angle" was alone and strongly questioning the models predicting a tsunami for new york hospitals. remember, governor cuomo's claim that he would need nearly a 30-40000 ventilators in the
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state? today, this is what he said. >> we've stabilized our health care situation. there are other places in the country now seeing increases in the death rate and seeing stress on the health care system. we have sent 100 ventilators to michigan and 50s down the 52 to the state of maryland. >> laura: that's how comparatively well they are doing when it comes to critical care in new york. and this is where things stand in california. remember, it's a state of 40 million people. it reported 76 coronavirus deaths so far today for a total of 864 deaths. by august 4th, the newest projections are accurate, the mortality rate there will be astronomically low. gosh. what's going on in california. why is it happening that way? they close down on, what,
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march 16th, 17th? can that really explain all of this? a study reported in the economist that many more americans with mild or more no symptoms were infected with covid-19, but never tested. the dominator we were talking about. the virus must be less deadly than official data suggests. covid-19 takes 20-25 days to kill victims. the paper reckons that 7 billion americans were infected from march 8th to the 14th, and social data shows that 7,000 deaths three weeks later for the resulting pathology fatality rate is .7%,similar to. that's amazingly low. just a tenth of some of the estimates. by comparison, look where covid winds up in mortality as compared to the flu.th there it is. fascinating what our political leaders had predicted again.
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just 21 days ago. of course, eminent scientists who were informing them. despite all the good news, there iss no sign that liberal governors or mayors are changing their zirconium responses. in fact, some may even be ramping them up. l.a. mayor eric garcetti still says no big gatherings. >> until there is either a vaccine, pharmaceutical i intervention, or herd immunity, science is the science, and public health officials have been very clear we've got many, many miles to walk before we are going to be back in those environments. >> laura: a few weeks ago, he was warning the l.a. county was going to be like in new york city. what happened to that? thankfully that didn't come to pass. if the citizens of california, if they areiz not happy with the decisions at some point, they are going to need to make their voices heard where they are going to need to speak up in any way they can do these are elected officials, they are supposed to be representing the health of the whole state making sure people are behaving g responsibility for sure.
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small business owners, they did this yesterday. in north carolina and today in michigan, thousands of patriots rallied for reopening, we will talk to an organizer in a moment. today i was thinking about this desperate need to reopen america. you see it, you feel it. people are, getting antsy. not because they want to go out to restaurants. because they sense what's really happening. and the ongoing violations of civil liberties in the shut down we've been documenting them. i ran across a recent "vanity fair" interview with anthony fauci. question him whether it's safe during the crisis for people to use the hookup apps like tender and grindr. he answered the question and he said it's tough, everyone has their own tolerance for risks. if you figure out you want to meet somebody, looking for a
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friend, sit in a room and put a mass on and chat a bit. if you want to go a little more intimate, that's your choice regarding a risk. bingo. okay. life is filled with risks, in other words. we should all be careful and all be responsible. but the government cannot, nor it really should try, to eliminate all risks associated with covid-19 anymore than it could with the h1n1 or the swine flu. when we step out of the door, when we walked out of the streets, we enter a building, we enter a car, get on a bike, there are always relative risks. but the damage to millions and millions alive, even children's lives, and basic freedoms for the shut down, that's also very real. and it's been absolutely devastating.
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many have a risk what they rate as more worrisome to them. they would risk this in order to preservee their way of life. >> there are also deaths involved in keeping it closed. when you look at mental health, when you look at suicides, suicide hotlines which are exploding, people who didn't take drugs and now they are being drug addicted because they are going through a problem, they have no jobs, and the money coming in, we have to get back to work. >> laura: president trump, all of america is the patient and if we do not reopen soon, she's going to flatline. those are my thoughts at the end of day 30, america in shutdown. joining me now is small business owner, one who attended the protest against michigan's stay-at-home order today, matt feeley, volunteer with the michigan conservative coalition. your governor essentially said today that you would be stuck in the house anyway because there
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is snow on the ground, a late snowstorm in michigan for your response to that? >> it's just ridiculous. ultimately everyone that came out is so fed up with being sequestered and treated like small children and that we can't social distance and be diligent about personal hygiene and all those pvc guidelines and safe cactuses. we want to take our lives accurate one thing that we've learned through this is that this is going to be the new normal. covid-19 is going to be in our lives until the next year until there is a vaccine andnd we need to figure out a way to get back to as normal a life as possible while this plays out in the background. thend solution is not to allow this in our homes. >> laura: if you say when we get a vaccine, always amazes me to hear when we get a vaccine. we don't have an hiv vaccine.
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we didn't complete a sars vaccine. so the idea that there is definitely going to be a vaccine, that's an incredibly involved process, necessarily so, and it may or may not happen. but meanwhile, governor whitmer is saying that what you did, and thousands of people there, it was just a political stunt. check it out. >> the stay-at-home order, it was essentially a political rally. a political statement that flies in the face of all of the science, all the best practices, and the stay-at-home order that was issued. a small group of people that came together without masks on, brandishing their weapons, having posters of beingti antichoice. it's a political rally! >> laura: she says it's political and suddenly she starts bringing up antichoice -- i mean, i don't understand that but is there any fairness to that criticism that it wasn't a bipartisan group of people, its was basically just a bunch of republicans wanting to make her look bad?
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>> no. in fact, we went out of our way to make this bipartisan. this is not a political issue. to us, we would have the same protest with a republican governor or independent governor. weju just think our civil liberties are being violated and decided that the only way we could have our voices be heard asis to engage in basic civil disobedience. you know, a lot of unity, there were over 10,000 vehicles. we had over 6,000 trucks from the construction industry including cement haulers. we had people from the landscaping industry, heating and cooling. i >> laura: we've got to go. but we are seeing signs of life in the american public because a lot of us were out there saying, look, especially the ones that have varied relatively few infections compared to what was
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being projected, people are dying out there. small businesses are dying for people missing surgeries. people having to take pay cuts in the field of medicine because all nonessential surgeries are being put off. there is a lot of pain out there that has been overlooked and i think including by your governor. thank you so much.se great to see you tonight. >> we've got to get back to work. >> laura: absolutely right but my next guest is on the president's new task force to reopen the economy. jojoining me now is jimmy john o leoto who is the founder of jimmy john's restaurant chain. you are on the call with the president and business leaders l today. where is this all heading? are we heading for a monday parcel reopening for some states especially those that had very few infections? >> where it's all heading is i believe from what i learned today, there's going to be different strokes for different
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folks, there are areas less infected that i think is going to be open sooner. but i believe it's really different strokes for different folks, its management's job to manage and they are going to have to manage each situation, each town, each county differently with our leader, our president and our governors, i think it's going to be selective and i think it's going to be managed. >> it's bizarre, jimmy, we are talking about california. no one has been able to adequately explain california. i rejected some of the orthodoxy on the numbers early on and i was slammed for it. you know, i had a lot smarter people than i was crunching the numbers and doing a very, located the statistical analysis. this is not right. and when you see the numbers as they are in california, the
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hospital system as of today, i just got a call before the show, has i believe 114 covid patients. that's a cross i believe ten different hospitals. these are major institutions. and yet they are saying, well, restaurants aren't going to be able to operate the same or anywhere near the same, basically life is going to be upended until there is a vaccine. or may be until there is an w immunity test which isn't even accurate. how do restaurant chains manage to survive if you can't have more than a third of your normal traffic, which when you do the calculation that's about the average? >> the math doesn't work. so the math doesn't work. so eventually what happens is whenpe you run out of feed, thas when everybody dies. it's at a critical point right now that people, they need to get going again but we've been exhorting this for a while and
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there is something else that hit small businesses that was on intending consequences of the last administration is that jimmy john's, all small businesses were burdened with a very complex new labor laws. they were not, small businesses were not prepared to deal with it. hr departments, didn't have legall departments. as a tilt with sudden changes in labor laws of the last administration, they rounded the corner and learn to deal with it, learn to manage around all deof that. really had when in our sales, and now the small businesses just got pounded by the pandemi. they are resilient, and they are ready to go, and they are excited to go and they are going to go when the president says it's go time. it's going to be go time for there's nobody there to compete with small-town american
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business owners but whenwn small-town america wins, the net states of america lens. they are ready to go, laura. >> laura: that means the mayors and governors need to be responsive to all people while being concerned about safety as well. all people's needs and concerns have toee be addressed in the overarching solutions. thank you so much. it's great to see you. >> thank you very much for having me. it requires a complex managements and we'll listen to our leader. >> laura: resident trump is aiming to reopen the country starting on may 1st, but some states may get relief even earlier. >> we'll be opening up states, some states much sooner than others. we a think some of the states cn actually open up before u the deadline of may 1st. i think that will be a very exciting time indeed. governors are looking forward, chomping to the bits to get
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going. >> laura: been >> laura: ben carson secretary of hud also on the coronavirus task force. when we get to the when we can reopen, the california question that i'm going to stay on, what is it, the seventh largest economy in the world? the entire state is simply at a standstill with the exception of a few essential businesses. and every loss of life precious, without saying that it's obvious. n but the numbers there are so staggeringly low compared to other high population centers. thoughts? >> well, you know, we have two choices in a situation like this. we can say let's just stay shuttered in place until there is no vestige of virus, there is no danger to anybody, and in the
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meantime the economic infrastructure of the country iu completely destroyed and more people die from poverty than they do of viruses. or youor can say, look, life is full of risks. but we learn how to deal with them.wh when you go outside the house, you could be paralyzed, there are cars going up and down the street. i dared not go out there. or there iss a river. i better just sit on the shore and be terrified. why not just walk down a little ways and go across the bridge? what we have to do is we have to learn how to live with these risks. we learn how to deal with the virus. we learn how to distance ourselves socially. we learn appropriate hygiene. but we don't sit there and wait for the infrastructure of the country to be destroyed economically. >> laura: the concern that a lot of us have about this immunity testing, it's great to have this idea of community testing. it's not that simple. i know you haven't been looking at it because it's not
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foolproof. there's a b lot of false negatives, and false positives. and we don't know how long any immunity would even last. doesn't that go back to your point that the more complex the reopening process of six stages, more plaques that is, the more risk to the larger patients of the american people. >> we've made tremendous progress with testing and will continue to make him in this process element progress with it. there'll come a time where we can test virtually every body. we aren't there yet but we are moving up that slope very quickly and we will get there. we don't have to wait till we reach the top of the peak in order to start acting in a logical way. that'shy why we have these very sophisticated brains. your brains have billions and billions of neurons, hundreds and billions can process more than 2 million bits of information in one second. why don't wee use that?
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we don't have to be paralyzed by fear. that's the thing that characterizes us as human beings. >> laura: dr. carson, very quickly. a lot of friends of mine in the medical profession that women getting breath reconstruction breast reconstruction are having to put that off because of this virus and what has happened in the two are not essential surgeries. can you speak to that very briefly? >> yes. the president was very concerned about that particular issue. ii think you'll be hearing something about that in the next daywo or two because there are many hospitals and have 30, 40, 50% of their beds and occupied. you've got a tremendous amount of talent, medical talent out there just sitting around. obviously that impacts our economic forecasts. so yes, we are going to deal with that along with lots of other things. gradually introducing people back. recognize that 24% of the counties in this country have no
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virus problems at all. >> laura: i'm so glad you are in thek task force. we'll talk to you soon. coming up, and a bombshell reports not exposing what china knew about the coronavirus. we are going to find out exactly when they knew it. josh hawley next. - when i noticed
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♪ >> the rea >> the reason we are in a crisis we are at today is not because of anything that china did, not think that the w.h.o. did, because the president, he didn'a take this virus seriously. we didn't have to have tens of thousands of people dying. >> laura: this is disgusting for 24 hours ago, a democrat senator on television just absolving china of any responsibility in the coronavirus outbreak rate we've been highlighting the common as countries observation for weeks
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now but this morning the reporting reveals the length of the chinese cover up. according to the ap, the head of china's health commission held january 14th teleconference with health officials there revealing that the most severe challenge since are as 2003 and likely develop as a major public health event. despite that grim assessment, china's leaders didn't warn the public for six days, had they acted immediately, once that estimates say they could've cut the number of infected people by two-thirds.ei china's deceit doesn't stop there. it never does. fox news learning late tonight that the u.s. now believes that china's initial claim, that covid-19 originated at a wuhan wet market, i always knew that was a lie. we confirm this, the virus escape from the high-security virology lab in wuhan. ironically, the chinese lab was studying the coronavirus in
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order to supposedly prevent a pandemic. and patient zero now, remember, five weeks ago, we asked why don't we really know about this patient zero? well now, that would be patient zero was apparently a lab work worker. so instead of warning the world, fox was told that china moved to silence doctors and destroy lab samples. so china has to be held h accountable for this plague. luckily, senator josh hawley has legislation to do just that. the missouri senator joins me now. senator, please tell us what your bill would do to hold them accountable, and tell us how the mouthpieces for beijing, i understand, they are now targeting you. >> indeed. the beijing government putting together a video, lara, call me a liar and called me to resign. i figure i'm on the right path and we figure we keep pushing ahead.
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number one, it would set up a condition, an international commission led by the i united states to get the truth. we know the truth isn't that this was just some happenstance occurrence, that china didn't know anything about it we knew they knew all about this, they suppressed the evidence. it now looks more likelyce than not it came from one of their own labs. so let's get the truth and let's hold them accountable for it. with my bill, it would allow every citizen in this country who has been affected by the coronavirus to sue beijing, to sue the chinese communist party to get damages for it there that's the kind of accountability that we need. >> laura: senator hawley, don't we need to move immediately to pull back our essential manufacturing from china? we need a new industrial policy. i know they have a lot of our medicines now so we have to be careful. this is an opportunity for the president to do what so many americans have been asking for for decades,sk frankly. getting our primary manufacturing back home, made in
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the usa. >> absolutely pure that's critical to surging out of this crisis, laura. we've got to get our economy reopen the scene as we can. we've got to get american workers back to work. a part of that is bringing home a critical production, bringing home critical supply chains. our medical supply chains at the very top of that list. i've introduced legislation that would secure those supply chains, that would enact new requirements, that a certainin percentage of our medical needs have to be produced here in the united states. and it s also would incentivize business to move their production back to this country. we would be crazy after all that we havee learned from this experience about our dependence on china, weaved to be crazy not otto take steps to try and get more independent and bring production back to this. >> laura:: bill gates is very upset that the president has moved to defund the w.h.o., at least until we get answers. he said that's a disaster because the pandemic is
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basically going to go down the south america and it's going to spread, the w.h.o. is so great. given their complicity in this cover up, why are we in the w.h.o. forse another second is y question. >> my question too per the president is there needs to be an overhaul of the w.h.o. before we get back into it in terms of funding it. the truth is they failed the world. what have they done to stop this pandemic. they do when china was lying to the world, when china was jailing doctors who were blowing the whistle on this. they knew in december, maybe earlier, they had a major health crisis on their hands. what did they do? they tried to suppress it, they tried to suppress people from treating the disease, getting thee truth out, we are all suffering because of that. >> laura: americans died and our economy is fried, we have some of your colleagues that
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are, as you heard in the intro by senator murphy, blaming trump for this. this is despicable! completely despicable. >> it is -- the ability of folks, partisan politics, it has a way of totally capturing the brain in washington, d.c., and nobody can think of anythingt' else. but it's time to set that aside. it's time to put america first. it's time to go all in on america. we need to put this country back to work, r ready to work. we need to break the backs of this epidemic and then get the country open and get people their jobs back and part of that means securing our critical supply chains from china. >> laura: american workers. the president echoed something i've been saying for weeks. he basically said that congress has to come back into session. we are going to start voting on nominees, regular course of business. or he's going to take action which is unusual, constitutionally allowed, to can adjourn congress.
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if this is in all of government approach, where the heck is congress? >> all of the nominees that are out there, the president has beeno unable to fill large parts of his government for literally years now because democrats have slow walked or filibustered every single nominee. here we are in a crisis and i hear my democrat colleagues complaining the government is gonot staff. there's a reason it's not staffed, you won't let is a vote on any of the nominees. the democrats are going toe continue to play these games in the midst of a crisis, the president has got to consider every option at his disposal. we also know in terms of congress doing its job, congress is got to take action right now to get this economy back on its feet we need to take action to rehire every worker who's been laid off. we need to protect everywe american job for the duration of this crisis. >> laura: senator, if you gotra one of the biggest economies in the world over there in california shut down until there is a vaccine, basically a lot of
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it is going to be shut down until we have a miracle community test for everybody. that's just not going to happen. that alone is such a huge part of our economy. but gavin newsom, may be all good intentions, giving goodim intentions. but that is ever stating. they have a very small percentage of deaths, thank goodness coming to new york. almost like they are two different viruses. >> my concern is if we don't get action pretty darn quick, if we don't take action to get people their jobs back and to secure those jobs through the duration of this crisis, we are not going to have your and economy to reopen. you can't open something that doesn't exist. time for congress to take action now. >> laura: senator, thanks for taking action to this china issue. this is been caught isolationist, xenophobe for 25 years, restriction is for this issue.
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i really appreciate it, sir. good to see you tonight. up next, nancy pelosi revealing her secret to surviving the lockdown. governor cuomo disses god a question mark no. raymond arroyo more with seen and unseen next. we renovated the guest room, so you can live with us. oooh, well... i'm good at my condo. oh. i love her condo. nana throws the best parties. well planned, well invested, well protected. voya. be confident to and through retirement. we were paying an arm and a leg for postage. i remember setting up shipstation. one or two clicks and everything was up and running. i was printing out labels and saving money. shipstation saves us so much time. it makes it really easy and seamless. pick an order, print everything you need, slap the label onto the box, and it's ready to go.
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>> live from america's news headquarters, i am ashley strohmeyer. california giving cash payments to illegal immigrants hurt by the coronavirus.
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governor newsom announcing 150,000 adults will receive $500 each. coming from a mix of charitable funds with california taxpayers fitting the bill for $75 million but currently illegal immigrants are ineligible for federal stimulus checks and unemployment benefits. the operation gridlock to the steps of the state house also drawing wards of honking cars. governor whitmer responded by saying that the rally puts health at risk. i am ashley strohmeyer. back to "the ingraham angle." for all of your headlines, log on to foxnews.com. >> laura: it's time for our seen and unseen segment where wb expose the big cultural stories of the day. joining me now is raymond arroyo, fox news contributor.
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all right, ray, tb getting very strange during this staying play shutdown deal. what is speaker pelosi up to. i wonder where is she, pray tell?s >> she's showing up a lot and she showed up on james gordon's show from her kitchen. after claiming that the president is not concerned about the working people during the coronavirus outbreak, she revealed her key to surviving the quarantine. >> chocolate. >> really? >> chocolate. chocolate candy. >> wow. my... wow. >> other people in our family love other flavors print chocolate. we have some other chocolate here. >> laura, you heard of caliph in your closets, that's the california closet of freezers. she's talking about protecting the working man, she's got the
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gourmet ice creams, those go for $13 a tub. >> laura: pelosi? does pretty well appear they are doing fine, raymond, in the confines of napa valley, sonoma valley. >> if you miss the prime time up at corona special, i found the political equivalent yesterday. cardi b and bernie sanders held an instagram media. one for the ages. >> uncle bernie! y'all, we got uncle bernie! how you doing? >> i'm good, carty. i want you to take a look at my nails. how they doing? >> they are looking very quarantine. you've been in quarantine for a whilee now. >> losing the nomination is a tough way to go, laura. >> laura: wait a second! i couldn't quite make out what she was saying.
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it was very high-pitched. >> she said, hello, uncle bernie! >> laura: i've never seen him smile. he was actually smiling. >> this is all about cardi b convincing her followers that joe biden is anha acceptable candidate and bernie came clean about his new role in all of this. watch. >>. what i am also trying to do right now, cardi, is to work with joe to see that he becomes a more progressive candidates. >> laura! >> laura: he looks like larry david. >> he's trying to get joe bidene to accept a $15 minimum wage, open borders, what you told cardi b, he's very close on immigration, moving in the right direction. this should be terrifying to democrats who want to win over middle america. this will not help them. >> laura: i have to say this. you've got to remember whom they are promoting, right?
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joe biden out there today, what was he doing? >> today he was hosting a workers town hall, laura, or whatever you want to call it. >> i want to thank everyone onyo this program, or this program, this town hall we are having here, roundtable, for taking time to speak to me today. it was moree than one, you know, coronavirus. this covid-9 is one string of that. >> covid-9! joe biden things probably cardi b is a topical. hey, generally, the bengay didn't work. he doesn't know who cardi b is. this iss his outreach to the workers today. not working very well. >> laura: joe, at one point he said, you've got to wear masks. trump doesn't wear masks. you have to wear a mask. he said after this interview ends, i'm going to grab the mask because of all the television
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apparatus people -- there was something bizarre. raymond, i want to get your reaction to your hometown mayor, mayor latoya cantrell's plan for the big events in new orleans. jazz fest, which i was supposed to go this year. i guess that is over. which recently all moved to the fall. watch. >> my recommendation is absolutely no large events as it relates to the year of 2020. that the focus should shift the 2021. >> 2021, laura! the mayor, she claims she is the mayor of the city, yet she is the m mayor of noah. she canceled all these major events these years. we want people to be safe. she did not talk about the saints, however. what will happen to the saints, or nfl franchise here. other mayors are considering this as well. i spoke to new orleans sports executives today. they want to play, they want the
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saints back in the dome, and they are taking creative initiative to do so. you want to keep fans safe, so they sell fewer seats per they lmight have to install those, yu know, gv likes to purify people that kills the virus on surfaces. we have to find rid of waves before we say no to everything. i think p people want to get bak together and they want to take part in communal events. >> laura: the president said that tonight. we've got to get back. safe.t people to stay i can go back to what carson said earlier at the point of risk. relative risks given the lethality of the virus for certain populations and age groups of people, you've got to be careful of those certain groups, the people who are age sensitive for underlying conditions.de but life is filled with risks. you might as well just call it quits now. >> the very idea of anthony
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fauci that you put f ballplayers in a silo, hotel, they are all there that season? that's ridiculous, you play everything out in phoenix. before i go, i've got to play this bid. this is new york governor andrew cuomo's press conference the other day. religious believers are furious over the statement. you'll see why. >> the number is down because we brought the number down. god did not do that. state did not do that. destiny did not do that. a lot of pain and suffering did that. >> god didn't do it and faith didn't do it. there is an underlying animus towards people of faith and the power of prayer here that's really unbecoming for he uses god's when he and needs it politically and writes it off. it's an ugly trait. >> laura: thanks to archbishop cardinal dolan. >> archbishop andrew cuomo, apparently.
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>> laura: coming up, we expose how much bill gates is actually influencing the w.h.o. and you don't want to miss it.
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♪ >> laura: president trump's decision to withhold w.h.o. funding has upset one of the organization's most prominent supporters. that's microsoft founder gates tweeting in part, halting funding for the w.h.o. during a world health crisis is as dangerous as it sounds. the world needs them now more than ever for the truth is that the group needs gates more than ever. with the u.s. taking a pause, he will now be their largest active donor. that's right. one out of every ten bucks that the w.h.o. gets is from the world's second wealthiest man. so should we be concerned about how much one man has maybe an
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outside influence within corruptible entity such as the w.h.o. "washington times" opinion editor writing up a storm about this. it is all the money from gates influencing how the w.h.o.ow operates? h >> definitely, and thanks for having me, laura. it's an issue that's really fallen under the radar. bill gates withholds tremendous income for the what health organization and i'm not the only one saying that. back in 2017, "politico" which is not even considered a far right conservative organization, politico considers him that he has such impulse that if he wanted a policy pushed, the world health organization bureaucrats would oftentimes take the hit. not just funding we have to be
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worried about in america. this is an unelected guy who really has no political affiliations with america. and yet he has been given a huge to push what i view is anti-american policy based on coronavirus figures. this is something that he's not going to be held accountable to by voters. >> laura: here's what the gates foundation has given to the world health organization and related organizations. 395 grants totaling 3.6 billion to the w.h.o. he pledged up to 100 million to the global response to covid-19 for he pledged 279 million to the institute fore health metris and evaluations. the university of washington, that is the ihme health model that initially, you know, wasn't all that accurate in predicting what's going on with the virus.
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it's more accurate now with all the new data. he gave 13.5 million in grants to the cdc foundation for people think the cdc is just kind of an independent government agency, but they get money from the gates foundation. so it seems like gates has his much everything gpandemic related, cheryl. >> here's the interesting part. bill gates for the longest wanted to have the world health organization to declare coronavirus a pandemic and the world health organization did not want to do that. a day after bill gates through his foundation announced an infusion of $50 million, they call it a therapeutic accelerant to help fight coronavirus to find a vaccine, launch that money to go toward the world health organization one day after that announcement, the world health organizations doug and terry general came out and
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declared coronavirus a pandemic. >> laura: will be on this and thank you for saying this. we enjoy your pieces on this. remember adam schiff, what's he been up to? we'll tell you when we come ba back. om/tv and never go to the post office again.
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>> laura: it's time for the "last fi shannon: convalescent bite. you heardgh me say time and aga where's congress during this crisis? we have the answer for at least one member.
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>> really scary. there it is. what do you think? shannon: keeping him, nbc hard to flooded during impeachment, we hope you will, shannon bream, take it all from here. >> when we first got married my husband thought it would be a great money-saving thing if i learn to cut his hair. one and done. we begin tonight with a fox news alert. bret baer in just minutes with his blockbuster exclusive. what his sources say about the origins of covid-19 from the lab and wuhan, china. what happens now to the already tense relationship between the us and china.

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