tv The Five FOX News April 29, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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that kind of thing. in tennessee it will be 50% capacity, wisconsin about 50% depending on the establishment. ditto ohio and alabama as they plan on getting back to business, but slowly, tentatively. that will do it. here is "the five." ♪ >> jesse: hello, everybody. i am jesse watters along with dana perino, juan williams, greg gutfeld, and kennedy. it is 5:00 in new york city, and this is "the five." ♪ the left's double standard on joe biden sexual assault allegation exploding into a major controversy. top democrats who wants to lead the charge against brett kavanaugh are either silent or downplaying a credible claim against the nominee. the biggest hypocrisy coming from democrats on biden's vp short-list. take a look what they said during the kavanaugh
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confirmation. >> republicans want to confirm kavanaugh to the supreme court and they are willing to step on anyone, including the victim of a vicious sexual assault in order to advance their agenda. >> it comes down to credibility to your point, and it will be about listening to what each party has to say, but i believe her. >> i believe her. she is credible. she should be heard. >> jesse: and when it came to kavanaugh, democrats did not care about due process or giving him the benefit of the doubt. but now that it is joe biden, some of the same people are conveniently changing their tune. >> she has spoken, and they have done an investigation in several outlets. vice president biden has vehemently denied these allegations, and i support vice president biden. >> i believe that women need to be heard and listen to, but i also believe that those allegations have to be investigated.
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i believe joe biden. >> as i said, she has a right to tell her story. i can only speak to the joe biden that i know, he has been a lifelong fighter in terms of stopping violence against women. >> jesse: okay, juan williams, i have to acknowledge that you have been very fair in how we have treated the story with the kavanaugh and biden hypocrisy. and now that i had buttered you up, i want you to answer my question in the way that i want you to answer it. so, the producers just put together was devastating, how devastating is that montage to these women's credibility? >> juan: you mean to the nominees? the people who might be the vice president, jesse? >> jesse: yep. >> juan: i think it is pretty clear from the montage that the democrats are in a bind here. they said that everyone deserves to be heard, even if it is 30
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years later, that person deserves to be heard. that's what happened in the kavanaugh hearing. so i think that clearly the democrats are on the defensive here. let me say that it is also true that republicans, especially the trump campaign is trying to exploit this thing. both things can be true. the other point i would make here is that i think that if you stop for a second, you can look down the road, it's pretty clear that president trump is opening the door to a review of the 16 or 17 women who were on the record making charges of bad misconduct against him. and you can imagine that the same instrument that republicans want, the media, all of the charge making, there's another side to that and it will come against the president. i think that if biden was smart, he would come out into a big
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interview, hopefully on fox news, but anywhere, and talk about it. and he would also clear that university of delaware to release all records. let's just clear the air, because i don't think that this is going to end his campaign in any way, but i think it is better for the democrats to get this out and get it taken care of. >> jesse: kennedy, one if you agree with juan? could get it out now, and it will come back in the fall, obviously, may be asked of the university of delaware to release the papers and get it all out now. just take your medicine. >> kennedy: absolutely. it is one question that the biden campaign can easily take off the table. in the way that some of these female senators are treating this hypocrisy and double standard is incredibly offensive to victims. and what we need clearly is one standard that does not have to do with politics or someone you like, and the convenience of clearing this person in order to
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move forward. i think that's also very, very offensive and dangerous to victims who might not come forward, because they got caught up in this highly politicized vortex. and if it ruins lives, it damages reputations, and does very little to the people who have been so harmed as victims of sexual assault, that this has come to light in the me too movement. if you believe in that movement, they created the kavanaugh standard, that it is fair to go back decades into someone's life and hold them to account for choices they made back then. brett kavanaugh was a teenager. those are the accusations they were dealing with. joe biden was a united states senator, and he had much greater responsibility. and, arguably, more wisdom not to, not only not harm someone and sexually assault him, but also, not retaliate. and fire that person because
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those advances were unwanted. >> jesse: that's a good point, because this was after allegedly the anita hill situation where they were heavily involved in. allegedly the biden campaign are circulating talking points to the surrogates and pointing to "the new york times" article that they say clears them. it actually doesn't clear them. it's kind of a mess. >> dana: it's a mess. and this position of joe biden is untenable. they are saying, the campaign is saying joe biden denies it, but he has not been asked to directly. i agree with juan, he should either do an interview with a high profile person, and answer all of the questions, however, if he chooses to have -- yeah, greg. definitely. if he chooses to have his wife, sit with him during that interview, she cannot answer the tough questions for him by jumping in and saying, let me vouch for his character.
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also, if i can just say a couple of words about kamala harris, the senator, we did not play the montage of her vicious prosecution of brett kavanaugh during his hearing, but when she said, i know joe biden's character, and he was instrumental in the violence against women act. okay, that has nothing to do with her accusations. so, you either need an independent investigation like from the fbi. or do an interview, but basically, what joe biden has done by not himself talking about it, and all of these other surrogates in a position of having a point to "the new york times." what would happen today, even "the new york times" said that was fake news. because they said it was inconclusive, and if you have not read the story, listen to "the daily" where they interview the reporter that spent two weeks going through this. and at the end of this, she said, we don't know. and part of the thing that is a big mystery is that it is
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apparently, well, tara reade says that there is a complaint that she filed at the senate. and that paper and document should exist. how much do you want to bet that that paper disappears? >> jesse: yes, it has either disappeared or is under lock and key in the office of the university of delaware where they keep all of his papers. greg, there is no mechanism though to adjudicate this. it is just like these things that happened decades ago. it's just going to percolate out there in the atmosphere and people are just going to take sides. >> greg: where to start? to dana's point about kamala bringing up his support for the bill, let's not forget that harvey weinstein was an amazing supporter of feminist issues, as was bill clinton. there were reasons for that, because it is the progressive pig path that allows you to get away with a lot. i do think that the #metoo
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needs an adjustment, it should be #metoo unless i am a democrat running for president. and the vp choice was female, now he has added another. you have to be a woman, and douse the word of a credible female victim in order to be considered the vp. so it is a great measure of how thirsty these candidates for the candidacy are by how fast they will steamroll over this female alleged victim. we already knew that jell-o brand was an ambitious tracy flick. but i have to admire abrams for just jumping in there, because it is an interesting choice that you have to make in your head. do i sign the oath that i believe in joe and go nowhere?
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i don't believe in joe and go nowhere, or if i sign that oath, i could become the next president, because he is saying, screw reade, i get the vp nod, and joe wins, and he is removed for wandering in the rose garden, and i am president. she is very, very smart. this is the strangest time for an election in history, you have trump defending his crown, we have a pandemic, but the first time that the democrats are desperate to replace their nominee with anything that has a pulse. and i think that like, sometimes i wonder, why are we helping the democrats with this? why are we helping them unload this guy? because anything is better than joe biden. you saw him yesterday with hillary, the guy -- he almost fell asleep during it. and he also, he has to be
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worried. alyssa milano, his most famous ally tweeted support for tara reade. that's like, oh, boy. that's not good for him. that was his 11 in the bag that he had, hey, look, she has for me. not so much anymore. >> jesse: well, we will be watching tara reade on "the greg gutfeld show" this weekend. i'm sure that is her first menu dominant venue. >> greg: are you marking me? >> jesse: not at all. president trump last democrats, saying that they are taking vacation as many americans suffer. ♪ it's tough to quit smoking cold turkey. so chantix can help you quit slow turkey. along with support, chantix is proven to help you quit. with chantix you can keep smoking at first and ease into quitting so when the day arrives, you'll be more ready to kiss cigarettes goodbye. when you try to quit smoking, with or without chantix,
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>> dana: president trump pressuring democrats to return to washington to help millions of separating americans. house democrats way that it could be dangerous to return to work. but president trump has a different theory. >> would democrats, they don't want to come back. they don't want to come back. they should be back here, but they don't. they are enjoying their vacation. and they should not be because of nancy pelosi eating ice cream on late-night television. >> dana: so, kennedy, it is pretty safe ground to make fun of democrats for not wanting to come back, because they think that congress does not do anything anyway. but what about this point that the democrats say that their doctor told them that it would not be a good idea, how do they weigh that? >> kennedy: they socially distance, they wear face masks, they wash their hands, and they don't touch their face, and they
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do critical work, because they are deciding who lives and dies right now. that is the important reality. it is easy for them to stay in quarantine for the most part by and large their gilded towers and expect people to work in nursing homes and hospitals and fire and police stations, and aaa. thomas massie has been very entertaining on this. he wants to get back to work. he is challenging people to get back to work. house democrats say they don't have any legislation, so why should they hurry back to craft legislation? do something better and make your constituents feel like you care about them. >> dana: one of the things they could do is senators portman and durbin have proposed a way for the senators and congress to be able to vote by proxy or from afar, and there is so much resistance to that, i mean, doesn't it seem like there is a technical solution here?
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>> juan: i think there is. it's pretty clear what you laid out, dana, that's exactly right. there is a lot of prediction about people showing up in person in congress to do the work. what we are talking about is a 4.8 shrinkage in terms of gdp gross domestic product over the last quarter. that's terrible. i don't think you can blame republicans or democrats, and i sure don't think anybody can do anything but blame the virus. let's be clear. and when it comes to congress, and the presidents nasty little comment about ice cream and enjoying their vacation, i don't understand, because, democrats in fact with republicans have passed four large bills, two of them with huge spending intended to deal with the issue. and the democrats work very hard to the point that some republicans said, oh, you're
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slowing it down by making these demands, and these demands are not directly related. but the democrats are working to get an money for hospitals, for people who are poor and hungry in this country. i think that you can, even if you are a hard line, make a case. i don't think that's a fair argument. and i think that i would agree with kennedy on people coming back. if you can get one or two staffers in there, go to work. >> dana: greg, they already know that they are going to have to do more going forward, and they have not had any committing meanings, they cannot do any of the work, even if they wanted to do oversight, they could not do that. your thoughts. >> greg: this is hard, because i don't want them to work, you know? because i just don't want to them to work. however, the founding fathers assumed, because you know that i am an expert on the founding fathers, that people had to be present in the capital to work. but there are a few things that
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have happened since then. there are these things called computers, and you can get on the internet, and you can do stuff from afar. i just ordered like $100 worth of records. these guys in their old facts, and they are unhealthy, they stay home and work from home, and you can pass all of the money from there. i think it is time that we change the traditions to reflect the reality that there is. and i agree with juan, the economy, 4.8%? the argument that this is an evil capitalist society propagated on the american campuses five. professors who read nothing but howard zinn, how is it that this evil, greedy society sacrificing its economy to save the most vulnerable people? i mean, even sweden the model of cool socialism did not even do that. but here, fat cat america is
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something so incredible, it is so incredible, and we take it for granted and we need to remind ourselves of that. maybe. >> dana: jesse, do you think that the members of congress need to get back? >> jesse: i do. do you remember when nancy tried to leave the country on a judge and the president grounded the jet? i think this time he should send the jet to nancy, stock it full of ice cream and say, and five we are going wheels up, and i will give you a lift back to d.c. i mean, she is like the most powerful woman in the world, and she is sitting hiding in her mansion. you can't say the president is not leading and then hide in your mansion. it's not a good look, especially when the senate is coming back to work. she is basically acknowledging that she is not an essential employee. and most of the time, congressman arndt, but now they are. she could do china, infrastructure, she could do testing. she could create tons of
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legislation. it will be a symbolic move to show the congress working again. they should be on the front lines along with everybody else. i just hope nancy doesn't want to stay at home because she doesn't want to help the recovery or visually associate herself with the federal government response. but i'm going to give her the benefit of the doubt. >> dana: i'm sure you help that. i'm sure you do. coming up next, disturbing videos shows how out of control the homeless crisis is and the epicenter of the outbreak. ♪ ♪ limu emu & doug [ siren ] give me your hand! i can save you... lots of money with liberty mutual! we customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need!
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new york city leaders facing criticism as homeless people crowd the subway and create unsanitary conditions. scenes like this one that you are seeing putting first responders and essential workers who ride mass transit at risk. the state's governor andrew cuomo disturbed by what is happening. take a look. speak of the picture of a subway car filled with homeless people, and their belongings. respect the essential workers. that is disgusting what is happening on those subway cars. it is disrespectful for the essential workers who need to ride the subway system. >> juan: so, no doubt about it, essential workers do come to work off and on the subway. at the same time, the homeless
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population, they are very vulnerable, high risk in terms of underlying conditions, is there an empathy element that we have to consider as we look for solutions? >> dana: there absolutely is an empathy element, but also a time for actually doing something. we have been talking about the homeless crisis across america, but especially in some of these bigger cities like los angeles and new york, san francisco, seattle, where you have just a tremendous number of people who are out of sorts, who they have a loved one somewhere. maybe they are lost. maybe they don't have -- maybe they lost track of their family. maybe they have drug addiction problems or mental health problems. there's a ton of empathy to be had, but also time for action. so when these homeless people are on the street, then the governor does not have to necessarily say something like he had to say, and he is right. essential workers that have to utilize the subway to get back and forth to work, in order to
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help us be able to live our lives, he has absolutely something that should've been done. something should've been done along time ago about the homeless. and we need maybe to figure out a way to put a group in charge that is going to actually try to deal with homelessness, rather than try to sweep it under the rug. >> juan: that is great. and greg, i was thinking, you live in new york. and right now there is a lot of argument from people that say new york is different like the rest of the country when it comes to this virus. far more of a hot spot, do you think part of this is people just picking on new york or delighting in new york's probl problem? >> greg: not at all. i think that the subways play a role in transmission. we have people on top of people. the opposite of empathy is letting sick people be sick in public. and i hate it when any time you try to seek a solution, people say that you are being insensitive. this is why the mayor,
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mayor de blasio is a disgrace, because i think that he does not mind that the homeless have gone underground, because they are less visible. and this is one reason why we need people to get back to work and start using public spaces. let's remind everybody while the mentally ill have created dangerous campsites in the public areas, what was the mayor doing? he was harassing the law-abiding public trying to get them to narc on each other, and then threatening to send the police after jewish folks who are practicing their religion. i mean, that's really not a good look. and meanwhile, there is a wife who coincidently, wasn't she in charge of an $8 million program a test on helping the mentally ill off the streets, i wonder if there is any oversight by the mayor on that group? and to then, this is what is interesting. there is something else that you don't hear about the homeless.
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the homeless. what is the percentage of deaths because of those underlying conditions during the pandemic? what about the untreated mental illness? what about the substance abuse problems, now combined with covid, i'm serious, have you heard anything about who is dying? who was buried on that island, right, in new york city because their bodies were not claimed? who could that be? nope. does anybody care. did you hear de blasio say a thing? you know? that's all i'm saying. >> juan: well, jesse, if you were governor waters as a man who was frequently on the subway, what would you do, may mayor? >> jesse: first i would ask you for money, juan. because i got to run the campaign on something. and then i would do this. technically the governor controls the subways, mta is
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controlled by the governor, but the enforcement is done primarily by the mayor, because the nypd is controlled by the mayor, and the nypd has to go in there and clean it up. the nypd has been going in there. there than 60,000 engagements with homeless people on the subways within the last month or so. and only 3,000 of those instances did the homeless people accept the help say, okay, i will go to the shelter. i will get a roof over my head and a hot meal. they refuse the help they are given. you are offering more help to the homeless, who i feel bad for, and less help to the people that actually have to use the subways to perform their duties on the front line. so i have no confidence in the mayor to handle this at all. and unfortunately, you are not going to get the city humming unless you get the homeless epidemic taken care of before you deal with the pandemic.
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>> juan: kennedy, you just heard mayor watters, but mayor de blasio says close the subway between midnight and 5:00 and have authority is clear it out. what do you think of that idea? >> kennedy: i enjoyed the feud between mayor de blasio and andrew cuomo. because de blasio is completely incompetent. i'm glad that greg pointed out to the fact that he was singling out jews and threatening to round them up using police. those are the authoritarian tactics he is resorting to. and every time he makes a misstep, it makes cuomo look better. the city is run dangerously by an incompetent person who lacks empathy and hides behind his wife in so many instances and ends up harming more people. we are about to enter another quarter of contraction. and more of the economy
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contracting, the more homeless people you will see. the fact that it has gotten to this point, it's going to get so much worse. and the mayor is being chauffeured around the city. he was quartered in central park as a total hypocrite. and people's lives are at stake, and it just goes to show that he sees homeless people as completely disposable. and he really does not care about them. >> juan: i just want to say, kennedy, vote watters next time. ahead, don't miss greg's monologue on a key thing that can help america reopen. ♪ don't bring that mess around here, evan! whoo! don't do it. don't you dare. i don't think so! [ sighs ] it's okay, big fella. we're gonna get through this together. [ baseball bat cracks ] nice rip, robbie. ♪
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straight from "the washington post." airlines have been sued over grounded flights, ticket brokers have been sued over canceled events, insurers sued over coverage limits, grocers and internet retailers sued over rising prices. hospitals over protective gear, universities over closers. amusement parks over unused season passes. ski resorts, strip clubs have sued for federal benefits. a church has been sued for holding services. cruise lines sued for sailing with the virus. banks have been sued for helping existing customers first. gems for collecting membership fees. walmart for allowing -- target over the efficacy of hands sanitizer. ride hailing firms sued over sick leave, and multiple
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employers have been sued for firing workers complaining over safety measures. so here's a suggestion, when the lockdown lifts, everyone goes back to work except the lawyers. seriously, i think, this is the first time we are starting a civilization with the burden of lawyers. when the world began, you did not need a real estate lawyer to buy a cave. the witch doctor did not have to get to malpractice. there were no retells on the wheel. and do you think that we would even have fire if a lawyer was present? so to get us out of the hole today, to restart civilization, we need lawyers to lighten up. congress should attach legal immunity to these bailouts, so companies and organizations don't get ruined again by some guy who yelled cough in a crowded restaurant. and then when the economy returns, we can get back to suing the crap out of each
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other. this seems like a plan we can get behind except the lawyers, which means it's got to be good. you know, dana, i often, i know that we need lawyers. it keeps things simple so we don't go dual with muskets, but how can we expect businesses and organizations to take the risks and open if somebody can poll the modern slip and fall saying that today got sick at your arby's? >> dana: imagine that some of the rescue money that was just passed by the congress has to go to actually pay for lawsuits like this, not to keep people on the payroll which was the original intent. so i think this goes back, maybe not to the caveman days, but whenever there is a crisis, the trial lawyer start chasing the ambulances. this happens all the time. and the republicans for years have been trying to get tort reform passed in congress. they have a strong rapport with
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the democratic party, but this is a time when you need to compromise. senator mitch mcconnell this week has been talking about the need for this. he said that the next round of support money for america will not pass if there is not some sort of liability protection. he is not saying that because he wants to get to the lawyers, necessarily, he is saying that because it is essential in order to get the economy moving again. companies are too afraid to start back to work, they are worried about getting sued, they are not going to be able to do this properly. now, they have to find a way to do it so that companies still do what needs to be done in order to protect workers and all of us, like, we are never going to be in terms of keeping things clean, et cetera, but this legislation is going to pass, and is going to have liability reform, and i think that it is finally time that we are going to get a compromise on this in washington. >> greg: i'm not talking about allowing restaurants or
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businesses to be incredibly careless, there is common sense, but i feel like there needs to be an injection of reasonableness, of knowing, it will take some time to get our legs back in this economy. >> juan: that is absolutely right. i agree 100%. the only caveat i throw in, greg, i think that you can't excuse companies who say that workers, come back to work, but then they reckless or negligent in terms of protecting those workers so that people don't get hurt, people don't get sick. those companies should be held accountable. i don't think there is any question about it. in terms of just being reasonable, forget slip and fall, we just have to be reasonable with each other, because we are going through a difficult time. >> greg: exactly. there needs to be an office of reasonableness, jesse. which you can actually run it, and say, lighten up, everybody. i kind of admire the strip clubs of prying for federal benefits.
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>> jesse: juan is always talking about these people getting applications through to apply for the loans, they are the ones applying for the loans. the lakers applied for a small business loan. and he blames trump, how about you blame the lakers. but to the democratic party is in the pocket of the trial lawyers. every year they donate over $100 million, 75% of it goes to democrats, they take their profits from suing companies, plow it back to the democrats. and the democrats get reelected and do not pass reform. that's the shell game they play. but the democratic party economic philosophy is not what we need right now. their philosophy is overburdened and over regulate small busine business, and kind of downplay consumerism, remember, you don't need this extra car. why are you getting a truck? don't take a vacation. how much do you really, really need? and they make small businesses go out of business.
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they are suing them. accusing them of discrimination. making them compromise their religious integrity. that has to stop. anna will be set up where the left is hurting the recovery, and donald trump is going to be saying, hey, let's unleash this thing, and it is not a good thing to be and if you are a democrat. >> greg: kennedy, i am thinking about suing you for no particular reason. >> kennedy: solid. all right, i will counter sue you, how do you like them apples? it boils down to something very unsexy, but very needed. and that his responsibility, and that is a two-way street. you cannot just blame everybody else for everything, especially when you can't prove your grievance. so if you are immunocompromised and you are older, don't go outside. don't go back to work. and if you are an employer, don't put your employees in a situation where they can become infected. we all have to help each other out.
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and that does not mean that we run behind the courts as some sort of shield when our actions, our intellect, and irrationality could help us out in the first place. >> greg: excellent point. personal responsibility. straight ahead, is this the new normal? well, you can see this the next time you go out to eat. a man with a tattoo? ♪
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♪ >> kennedy: no can do, covid-19, dividing people literally behind plexiglass, check out this restaurant in italy trying it out. eating like they are making a bank deposit. and here in america, creating private dining space. it may sound extreme, but this could be the new normal. there is also serious consideration about bringing back the dreaded office cubicle instead of those open floor plans. which are really annoying. so, greg, i will go to you first. we are seeing things about plexiglass and a division, what of these solutions will stick and become long-term? >> greg: i think it will be
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more about spacing. i will mention my good buddy alfresco, that we will be hopefully opening up the fronts of restaurants on the sidewalk so that we can spread out tables. but if you look at all of the things impacted whether it is work or eating out or events, they all share one thing in common, that is gathering. we are naturally social human beings. and all of these things, even though we think work is about work, it really is about kind of coming together, the desire to be social. and if you remove the social from social events, then really, what's the point? i go to restaurants never for the food. i just like, you know, i like to observe the curiosities and be a part of the world. i am a worldly person. don't you understand? humans are naturally social. and at a certain point, we are going to have to absorb a little bit of risk. not a lot, but a little. space. >> kennedy: dana, what of our
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current covid-19 procedures do you actually like? >> dana: first of all, i do not believe that greg goes to look at curiosities, i think he goes for the pinot noir. and i would say that i am not a fan of the open plan. people should have cubicle so that they can have some privacy. >> kennedy: agreed. and i like no hugging, no handshaking, i am fine with that. juan, quickly, when do we get back to baseball? the yankees superior to the na nats. when do we see our respective team's? >> juan: stop it. no insulting. but just on the point, kennedy. i just saw a post that 66% of americans think the current restrictions are great. in fact, a large percent think we are going to quickly. so people have to understand that there are real fears, and consumers who would go back into restaurants, back to the ball game, they may not be going
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as quickly even if things are reopened. >> greg: about the 66% could be the people that have not lost their jobs. like if you look at the 25 million people, so, it is hard. and also, they never, they never say what they mean by the restrictions. is that the social distancing? which i could do forever. but like staying at home and not going to work. i don't know. >> kennedy: netflix and white claw, is that going to be our normal forever? >> jesse: well, i am a fan of fine dining. some say that i have the most refined pallet of anybody at fox news. so i am looking forward to getting back to eating out. [laughter] >> dana: 66% of people say that. >> kennedy: i have faith that we will all be bubble wrapped and divided by plexiglass and eating meals very soon. "one more thing" up next. stay with us. ♪
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we live in uncertain times. however, there is one thing you can be certain of. the men and women of the united states postal service. we're here to deliver cards and packages from loved ones and also deliver the peace of mind of knowing that essentials like prescriptions are on their way. every day, all across america, we deliver for you. and we always will. and finding new ways to take of ourselves.
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but you can still screen for colon cancer. because when caught in early stages, it's more treatable. so, don't wait. cologuard is colon cancer screening done at home. you can request it from home too. ask your prescriber if cologuard is right for you... or learn more about online prescribers at requestcologuard.com. it's for people 45 plus at average risk for colon cancer, not high risk. false positive and negative results may occur. ask about cologuard today.
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♪ expatriate time now for "one more thing." i'm gonna issue a challenge to dana perino, can you get jasper to do this? so i expect dana to train jasper to balance a beer bottle on his head for that long and we expect a video tomorrow, let's see what we get. >> dana: he's got a thing on his head, it won't work. >> juan: you guys have heard about barbie and batman, how about these new superheroes? take a look at #thank youheroes, they are essential workers, proceeds from
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the sale of the toys will go to charities for health care workers and first responders. real life heroes in action. >> greg: i'm the real hero here because i have this. we got some major fox news, i had no idea that foxes giggle -- listen to it being tickled. [excited squeaking] i don't know what that is but i could watch it for days. >> dana: this guy in colorado won $21 million powerball jackpots and look at this, he
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claimed his tickets on monday. he says his boss have a lot of plans for it, that was in pueblo, colorado, where i went to college. >> jesse: special report is up next with bret baier. >> bret: good evening, i'm bret baier. breaking tonight, word of a potential treatment for covid-19 sparking renewed optimism among government health officials, health experts, and investors, we'll and talk to one of our own experts about the developments shortly. the treatment news sent stocks soaring this morning, the federal reserve committing to keep interest rates where they are for the foreseeable future. statistics showing the economy shrank at nearly 5% annual rate in the first quarter, and many people calling for china to compensate for billions of dollars of losses and that is where we will begin tonight. john roberts starts us
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