tv The Five FOX News June 8, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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sense. america coming back to its more altruistic sort of dna. that is what this is all about. we are finding ourselves and better people at that. here comes "the five." >> greg: i am greg gutfeld with juan williams, jesse watters, dana perino and katie pavlich. "the five." so who knew that calling the cops when your family is threatened comes from a place of privilege? >> what if in the middle of the night my home is broken into? who do i call? >> yes, i mean, i hear that loud and clear from a lot of my neighbors and i know, and myself and i know that that comes from a place of privilege. >> greg: what an idiot.
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that was the president of the minneapolis city council who is planning a formal vote to defund the police. so after days of unrest, that is their next step. if you do not believe that we are in the middle of a mass delusion where humanity is willfully rejecting what works for what destroys, i don't think i can help you. but if you can't beat the mob, why not help them? let's defund. baby steps first, it's too expensive to start from scratch and create a police free city, so let's pick two cities and observe the outcomes. because the minneapolis city council is voting to defund, let's go with them first and let's do hollywood where some celebs who signed an open letter demanding funding actually lived. the comparison eliminates rays from the equation and sits it squarely on something else. wealth and class. while citizens of minneapolis will fall prey to chaos and roving gangs of violence, last week being the prequel,
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hollywood will rely on private security, which many of its fabulous inhabitants already enjoy. it's why john legend and others see no problem in defunding, because it will be a problem for them. at least with minneapolis, the hard left zombies on the council are ready to see their delusion through. citizens be or killed. let's see hollywood see the same thing. while the rich do fine while the poor suffer maybe that injustice will be televised too, in color, not just black and white. so dana, here is a question. if we can defund the police which we used to believe they were essential to governance, why can't the entire government to be defunded? what's more essential than the police? it's not senators, it's not congressmen. why not across the board?
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>> dana: remember back in junior high, back in our day, you learned the hierarchy of needs. what's the very first need? on which everything else depends? security. so there is one thing that we all learned, probably learned in kindergarten. the other thing is, minneapolis has said it needs about $45 million. they are asking the federal government for help to deal with how the damage that happens. why should the federal government provide minneapolis with that kind of support if they're going to try this experiment of dismantling the police? i think that the federal government should probably wait on that. the other thing that i thought was pretty interesting, you see that some in the media are already trying to help the left deal with this defund the police slogan. saying it needs more context, doesn't mean that. where we seen it before? it's like when they put out the green new deal and it was like
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they want to do what? actually, no. what it really means is, just going to tinker around the edges. what about "believe all women"? no, we don't do that either. what was the other one? ban corporate money from campaigns? and yet they all take the corporate money. at some point the progressive left is going to figure out the establishment democrats are just ignoring all of their slogans partly because they are nonsensical but also because they don't believe them. >> greg: right to. you know what it is, john oliver has become the spokesperson for the cathedral. he's the one that's now explaining all of these issues is not really being what they are. so when you hear "defund the police," which sounds unreasonable and stupid. then they retreat to a position that sounds reasonable by comparison. it's a sneaky strategy. we don't mean that. we mean shifting into youth at
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risk. just shifting funds around. that's not what they originally said. they are doing this by cover. and i know you agree. juan now. i was thinking to myself wait a minute. something like, i think by the way, defund the police makes no sense to me. i reject that out of hand. but i hear the slogan. i hear the slogan, much like i hear the slogan, you know, build the wall, drain the swamp on the right. it stirs up the right wing base. it never happened. it's not going to happen but it stirs up some in the political extreme. okay. to me, it's a nonstarter. thank you, jesse. i hope you believe that. but it seems to me there are reforms. >> jesse: i can see with my own eyes. >> juan: i see it too. i can see right through it, in fact. but i think that we can embrace and you know, it's now not just
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far left. it's like 60% of americans say that the police used excessive force in dealing with black americans. you hear a very conservative senator lindsey graham say there is problem here. and so in this congressional bill that was put forward today, you see some realistic reforms that are embraced or can be embraced by the likes of me anyway, things like bans on choke hold, increased use of the body cameras and the likes. no more no knock warrants like what resulted in the death of breonna taylor. these are logical and good steps. the idea that you would have more officers taken away from dealing with people who have mental issues or drug problems or youth that need help. it seems to me those are rational, good steps for america to take. >> greg: the only problem is is that nobody's actually helping the mentally ill, at least in our cities.
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police are often left with that burden. i would like it shifted to mental health professionals but that never happens. katie -- >> juan: we agree. >> greg: the upside, katie, you know there's an upside. the privatization. the fact that we can roll that gun control laws because of we are no longer being protected, we've got to protect ourselves. >> katie: greg, doesn't that really expose the way that they operate? it's so illogical. first they advocate for gun control so that you can't defend yourself until you need to call the police. then they farmed you. they then get rid of the police department and say that you are on your own and if you call the police, it's part of your white privilege. therefore you essentially deserve whatever was going to happen to you if someone broke into your house late at night. that's the first problem. i have some longtime friends, they have a show in minneapolis, local radio show. they call it the minnesota city clown-cil.
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it's not about justice. it's about social justice. you have to think about what this means. police are there to enforce the laws that are passed by representatives, whether it's the state level or the federal level. those representatives are voted into office by the american people, by citizens who choose who their leaders are to put those laws on the books. if you don't have police enforcing the laws, then everything is up for grabs in terms of people's feelings, what's justice based on skin color and class, nobody's actually equal under the law anymore. so this is a bigger question of what is the end goal here of tearing down the entire system, not just "defunding" the police were implementing some kind of reform. if you don't have police enforcing the laws made by the representatives of the people, everything starts to break down. >> greg: it's no surprise that it is the left side of the
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government that only he is dealing with one half of the equation, the police. they are going to solve the police problem but not the criminal problem. they don't see that if you just remove that, the criminal problem actually gets worse. >> jesse: yeah, everybody sees that except -- i won't name names, but just to mention something juan brought up. 450 miles of the border wall has been built according to politico, mr. williams. yes, the swap is being drained. that's why james comey and his merry band of miswits got fired. >> juan: you are back on your heels. >> jesse: this might be the dumbest. take a position that the whole country agrees with, that the death of george floyd was a horrible thing, and then do three somersaults backwards into a position that 90% of the country disagrees with. defund the police. dana is right. they did it with the environment.
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everybody wants clean air and water that they say let's spend 100 trillion and ban airplanes. they did it, they've done it with everything. so if you take away the police, who is going to protect the city's? the guys with the guns. who has the guns? the gangs have the guns. now you have to pay a fee for a game to protect you. it's called a protection racket. that's what happens. all the people that are calling the police when their home was burglarized, who are they going to send? not a police officer. they are sending a social worker. that's in the fine print of this defund the police movement, whatever that's going to do. if you look at the police in terms of these inner cities, a majority of the police officers are actually black and a lot of these big cities and a lot of the police chiefs in these cities are black too. where do the union dues go from the police unions? they go to democrats.
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so the democrats are just hurting themselves with this, politically and in terms of public safety. if they want to go, let them do it. everyone is just going to flee the cities and by guns. the two things democrats say they don't want to have happen. >> greg: all right. >> dana: greg, i know you have a tease. can i make a point? >> greg: sure. >> dana: i just wanted to remind everybody. in new york city, mayor de blasio is saying that he is going to reduce funding for the police, and he wants to put it into more things like education and dealing with mental health. but if you'll remember, it was actually the new york city government itself that had to admit that de blasio's education program of which they spent almost a billion dollars. they can't figure out any program that actually was benefited from that or did better and also when his wife did all that work on mental health, they had to admit that they basically wasted a billion dollars on that too. i'm not sure if new york should fall for that.
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>> greg: i think he's going to keep the police detail when he goes to his gym in brooklyn. the worst mayor in the history of the world. coming up next, are democrats handing the election to trump with their push to defund the police? a major update in the murder of former st. louis police captain, david doran.
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trace gallagher. >> the people looting the pawnshop that former police captain david dorn was trying to protect were all caught on surveillance footage. the murder suspect admits that when the video began running on news, he tried to change his hair and his appearance. it didn't work. police have arrested 24-year-old stefan cannon, a career criminal, for david dorn's murder. cannon was seen with six others looting that pawnshop, and police say when david dorn arrived at the store, stefan cannon walked towards the street corner with the gun and fired multiple shots. the charging document says at the time, cannon was the only person standing on the corner and plumes of smoke were seen coming from where he stood. investigators also found multiple shell casings. after david dorn fell to the ground, the suspect walked back toward the pawnshop and a witness heard somebody telling the other looters to leave. and a stolen tv was also found where cannon was arrested. this is also the first time that
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we have learned the david dorn, the father of five, grandfather of ten, was shot multiple times. juan. >> juan: very sad. thank you for that report. will the defund the police movement help president trump get reelected? joe biden feeling the pressure from some on the left to support the movement but in fact biden's campaign today released a statement saying biden does not, does not agree with the idea. progressives have been hard on joe biden's record, but should they be careful? as i wrote in the hill today, playing into trump's hand on biden and race because the election will be a binary choice between biden and trump. before we get to the politics, jesse, let me ask you a simple question. is it possible that we can all agree that whoever shot and killed captain dorn should be
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prosecuted and sentenced to the max? >> jesse: of course we do. i just hope that the biden campaign money didn't go to bail him out. so biden, obviously joe biden said the right thing today. he disowned this whole thing. but that's just his campaign releasing a statement that he didn't write. i would like to see joe biden do with the minneapolis mirror did appear remember what that guy did? he was standing in a crowd that was very upset. the crowd have the microphone and they point blank gave him the mic and asked, defund the police are knocked and or else we are sending you packing. i'm not sure that biden could have handled that moment. pretty easy to release a statement from your basement. think about this, the democrats have come out with the position that even juan williams thinks is so radioactive, you have been have to distance yourself from it. the democratic party.
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if a democrat, you can wear black face, that's fine, but supporting the police is a crime? that's where we are right now. >> juan: right, i am opposed to this whole defund the policing that i do think that if you are white and call the police you might get a different reaction than if you are black and call the police. anyway, greg, i wanted to come to is what i see has a problem -- >> jesse: i don't think that's true. >> juan: i'm black. i do know that. >> jesse: has that happened to you, juan? i'm sorry that i think most of the police in this country are very respectful regardless of race. >> juan: i hope that they are. i'm just telling you that there's a difference response for me as a black person with me as a policeman. anyway, greg, back to the topic, i think president trump on the one hand says biden really screwed up and put a lot of people, black people in jail
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with the '94 crime bill and on the other guy and he says biden is too soft on crime. you have to pick one where the other and it looks like he's confused. >> greg: it's actually because biden is confused. he went every which way on this issue because he lost his spine in an effort to win office. i want to address the points of the segment. if the murder of a black grandfather's scene has somehow less important than what led to the days of chaos, then we know and we realize we are forced into accepting a narrative shaped by the media and the hard left who is now deciding who you can protest over and you can't. somehow the life of a man because he was a cop means less and therefore one needs no protest about that because he was a cop. the problem with the antipolice movement is that you can't argue with a group of people it won't
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take yes for an answer. it's why it's pointless to bring up ideas like ending the drug war or demilitarization. the mob did not stop or care about the first step act, prison reform, or bail reform. meaning you can't appease people who deem that your evil. my feeling about this antipolice movement, don't waste your breath on it. don't try to engage. because they don't want, as ilhan omar said, we don't care about your reforms. very clearly. >> juan: katie, i wanted to stick with that left-wing attack on biden over the '94 crime bi bill. you know, i think people forget that in '94, there was a lot of concern about crime and between '94 in '17 there's been almost a 50% reduction in crime.
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congressional black caucus, black mayors all supported the bill. why is the left playing trump's game? >> katie: i don't think they are playing trump's game. i think joe biden, as we have discussed, has not done a good job of explaining exactly what you just did, why he supported that belt and how it made communities supported by the end -- naacp, that those, it was safer. people wanted joe biden and other elected officials to do something about it and they did. does that mean 20 years later doesn't need to be reformed? it doesn't mean that but the idea that joe biden hasn't explained himself while has hurt him a lot. look at the contrast, people in suburban america want the police to keep their community safe. the nypd commissioner was on with neil cavuto earlier and he said when he does these listening sessions and neighborhoods in minority neighborhoods, he always hears
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that they want more police to keep criminals from running roughshod over people who are vulnerable in their neighborhoods. they're not asking for fewer police. the president has been able to really do this both ways. he's been able to condemn the murder, or the killing of george floyd, and then he's also been able to say we are going to defend law enforcement, uphold law and order, and we believe that the majority of police in this country are good people who are doing good things to protect the neighborhoods that needed them most. so biden has done a pretty poor job of being able to thread the needle and do both of those things at the same time. >> juan: thanks, katie. dana, the polling on this is like two-thirds of americans disapprove of president trump's reaction in the wake of the george floyd killing and the protests. but the question then becomes for the far left, hey, you get either biden or trump in november. you've got to pick one. i don't see how the left has any hesitation here.
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>> dana: i think that the left, one, we know they are really unenthusiastic about biden's campaign. they're enthusiastic about voting against trump but they're not enthusiastic about voting for biden. and you saw today in the senate, or on capitol hill, you had nancy pelosi and chuck schumer and others take a knee and it might be a beautiful gesture but i think the democrats are going to have to work a lot harder for these votes to get people to actually come out and vote for biden. it's not just going to be a given. they are going to want something from it. so biden, the campaign spokesperson said he's against defunding the police. can he be daft enough in his oratory to explain that position and be effective? we'll have to to see on that. >> juan: ahead, some public health officials taking heat for encouraging protests despite the
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♪ >> katie: so much for social distancing as we saw massive crowds gather nationwide protesting the death of george floyd and despite weeks of warning people about the dangers of not keeping 6 feet apart. public health officials are now saying social justice matters more than social distancing i and are encouraging people to join protests. dr. anthony sochi warning these demonstration could cause a second coronavirus peak. greg, who are we supposed to trust anymore if immediately politics erases all the sacrifices people have made over the last three or four months? >> greg: you don't trust experts, because they've been wrong on everything.
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they discover new ways to be wrong around an issue. usually you say yes or no. they have a dozen different ways to screw it up. the politicians lied to us. now you realize that as long as your political views are shared by the media, you can do just about anything. i want to bring up a poll. 80% of americans think the country's spiraling out of control. the reason for this i think is lack of real information. we were consistently in the dark on covid, we are wrong about masks. asymptomatic spread. now we have riots and we have destruction independent of any statistical analysis or debate. we can't even talk about the numbers of killings. whites, blacks, stops, whatever. ask instead we to accept the narrative with the media so the public is adrift and scared because we feed them the poison
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that we call news. it's not news. >> katie: yeah, so true. dana, these weren't just opinions given out from health officials. it was turn in policy the people had to follow will be punished for. and yet if you lost your job and you're not watching these people saying these things, they are probably pretty upset. >> dana: yes. they are starting reopening's in new york and new jersey and many other places. the list of requirements, it's so long. i think some of these restaurants in particular are going to have a very hard time surviving at a 50% occupancy rate. i hope, i want them to survive absolutely but i think that the government is going to have to figure out a way to relax that especially for getting this information that the virus is not as deadly, not spread as easily, et cetera. i know we've had 6,000 people die since the beginning of june. it's a lot. we know that there's a problem here. but when you have politicians
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like mayor bowser of d.c. who overnight took off her twitter profile "stay home, d.c." as soon as the protests started, then you know it is absolutely political. >> katie: pretty disgusting. juan, your thoughts. >> juan: well, i think the premise of this segment is exactly right. public health officials have not been aggressive in telling people to stay home. but i think some context is important and i think one is people know that being outdoors, there's less chance and two, most of the demonstrates are wearing -- demonstrators are wearing masks. we are past the height in terms of infection and death rate. some context is important. the second thing, for a lot of people when you see something as outrageous and amoral as what happened to george floyd, people are more willing to take some
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risks. i can tell you personally i can understand it. i side with my family this weekend when they wanted to join in the protests. there is great concern about the virus but it's important. as americans to stand up when you feel that our democracy, our humanity is being violated. that's pretty deep. >> katie: yeah, jesse, don't you think it's pretty deep for people who lost their family businesses that have been in their family for decades or who no longer have a paycheck to feed their families? they can't retire, put their kids through college as a result of the last three months. that's pretty deep balls also. >> jesse: they felt their humanity was violated as well but the media shamed them and told him they were threatening the public health. here's my thing with public health experts or experts in general. you only become an expert when a liberal writer quotes you in a liberal publication. right? it's only the liberals that are deciding who are the experts.
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have you ever heard of a conservative expert? no. if someone disagrees with obamacare, they say a conservative economist who worked in the reagan administration. and then right under that they say nearly all public health experts disagree. so come on. we had a couple people partying at spring break and they said everyone was going to die and then a couple months later, they had people all over the street and said that was a risk worth taking because of black lives matter. because racism was more deadly than the coronavirus. now, i'm not an expert, so i'm not going to weigh in on whether that's true or not. >> katie: jesse, i know the stay-at-home orders are being lifted because it's clear that you got a haircut. so congratulations. cancel culture strikes again after "new york times" editor caves to the mob and resigns over an op-ed from a republican
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♪ >> jesse: the far left mob wins again. "new york times" opinion editor james bennett forced to resign after employees revolted over the paper's decision to publish his op-ed by senator tom cotton. staffers were furious over cotton saying the military should be used to stop the looting and the writing. the senator slamming the paper over what happened. >> they totally surrendered to a woke mob from their own newsroom that apparently gets triggered if they are presented with any opinion contrary to their own as opposed to telling the woke children in the newsroom this is the workplace, not a social justice seminar on campus. >> jesse: katie, i think
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republicans for many, many years been wondering how to get a "new york times" opinion editor fired and i think tom cotton finally figured out how. >> katie: i love the woke child mob classification. it's absolutely true and i love that his office has been fighting back. it's the solidification that "the new york times" has become a far left newspaper not interested in liberalism but interested in leftism. been proven considering they are willing to run offense by dictators like, you know, the dictator in turkey, erdogan, they are willing to run offense in defense of pedophilia but if you're trying to squash rioting, the editor has to resign because he woke child mob comes after you. i want that on a t-shirt. >> jesse: greg, seems like "the new york times" was more upset with an op-ed in the fact that their city has been burned to the ground. >> greg: of course, amazing
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priorities. they had bill ayers write an op-ed on 9/11. that was bad timing. this isn't even the worst part of the woke mob. it's going to be impossible to solve any kind of racial issues if you aren't permitted to discuss it. instead you must accept blindly the terms of the debate. that's the real intolerance. you have to accept the terms and kneel, genuflect, and confess your original sins which i'm sorry, it ain't going to happen with me. given that corporations are not essentially sponsoring the ongoing rage-athon, we are incentivizing rage because we are rewarding it. that to me on a long-term in a more violent way, in a scarier way is a bigger problem than "the new york times," you know, freaking out over a column. >> jesse: dana, how do you see things going now at "the new york times" and pretty much everywhere now that we have seen the power of the mob?
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>> dana: i think you can look at the trajectory of how the head of the organization commented on it. he defended it, saying i believe in the principle of openness to a range of opinions even though we may disagree with. and then hours later he told the newsroom in a town hall that the op-ed was contentious and it should not have been published. so if you caves within hours, just imagine where else this is going to end up. i would point out that the employees that complained, they seemed very organized, and they all used workplace safety language. from the h.r. handbook, to make sure that their point was made and that they would be taken seriously. so i don' do believe you will st elsewhere. >> jesse: that language scares a lot of people. i just learned federal troops have been used to fight the democratic governors in the south over a desegregation when
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they tried to block that. they were used to quell the l.a. riots. george washington used them. they were used in the virgin islands. it's not that crazy of an idea, is it? >> juan: well, the governor has to ask, unless you do something like they did in little rock which is defy a ruling from the supreme court, in which case you can understand. but you know, i found cotton's argument alarming. but i think it's legitimate to air the argument and lead us as americans, you know, deal with it and say is it legit for federal troops to be here dealing with a peaceful protest, arguably suppressing dissent and increasing the chances of confrontation if looting is your argument, well, i think federal troops using helicopters and smoke bombs and what do they call it? pepper balls or whatever because they don't want to call it pepper spray.
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♪ >> dana: amid the turmoil and unrest in the country, here is a little sliver of great news. 18-year-old antonio nguyen jr. watched as protests turn destructive in buffalo, new york, and the high school senior responded by spending ten hours helping clean up his community. now he's been rewarded. watched as protests turn with a car, insurance for a full year and a full college scholarship. thanks to members of the community who noticed his good deeds. this is a great story. there's been others like this across the country, juan, that we don't always get to them because there is breaking news. it's worth holding up this young man as an example of a great citizen who was just trying to do the right thing in his community. >> juan: yeah, and it's nice to see that a good heart gets
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rewarded. you can't always count on it but it's wonderful when it happens. i feel like it's justice. he went out of his way to set an example for other young people in his community about what it meant to love his community and he did it. other people saw it and responded. he's not only got the red car but he's got now a scholarship for college in buffalo. i did a graduation speech there and i have an honorary degree. so proud of them for doing this and the people supporting this young man. it speaks to people beyond him, dana. it's an example to us all. >> dana: greg, he spent ten hours there a lot of people in the community said you know, we should go over there and try to clean it up and when they arrived it was already done. >> greg: yeah. i don't know. i would have done more. actually. i saw this and i thought why is
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this guy great? he understands what works about life, doing something without being asked and then demanding nothing in return. he is like the opposite of a grievance warrior. i was thinking when i was looking at this, somebody should start a sweepstakes scholarship. incentivizing young people to clean up their cds because when people saw this, they immediately wanted to reword him. it's the reciprocity. they want to give this guy something. very smart kid. >> dana: yeah. and he is a plus. >> greg: you can buy that book on amazon. >> dana: katie, tell me what you think about it. we have a few seconds. >> katie: i love that he wanted to do something for his community and the place he lives because he's proud of it. these are the stories, that a majority of people are doing things like that because they
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agree with cleaning up their own environment and standing up to the people who ruined it. i love it. >> dana: jesse, you said a few years ago that your mom's of the most important thing you can teach her children is resilience and i was thinking about that when i saw this young man. he did it on his own. figuring out a way for his community to be resilient in being part of it. >> jesse: it's a great point. i want to know where juan gets all these honorary degrees. how many honorary degrees do juan have? can i get some of those? also i have an idea and i know greg can make fun of me about it for one second because i want to say we needed to have a national conversation, but a real conversation and here's what i'm proposing. the police force gets into street clothes, gets in a gymnasium and talks to the community. they just talk. they get to know each other, like when juan and i went out until 3:00 a.m. the night before the super bowl. you just get to know someone and
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talk and see what they are really like. and then you keep the lawyers out of the room. keep the politicians out of the room. that would go a long way into healing some of these problems. >> dana: all right, jesse. maybe you'll schedule these across the country. "one more thing" is up next. ber things than rheumatoid arthritis or psoriatic arthritis. when considering another treatment, ask about xeljanz xr, a once-daily pill for adults with moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis or active psoriatic arthritis for whom methotrexate did not work well enough. it can reduce pain, swelling, and significantly improve physical function. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections like tb; don't start xeljanz if you have an infection. taking a higher than recommended dose of xeljanz for ra can increase risk of death. serious, sometimes fatal infections, cancers including lymphoma, and blood clots have happened.
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♪ >> jesse: don't make >> greg: come a time for one more thing, dana. >> dana: i want to tell you about dr. freeman who was a debate coach my legendary one at texas a&m university who passed away over the weekend. he was 100 years old and he started teaching debate in 1949 and taught his entire life and to figure out a way to beat out
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competitors like harvard and the university of chicago and taught to martin luther king jr. and worked with denzel washington and actors for the movie the great debaters. i love speech and debates on what he did with his life and just want to recognize him. he passed away over the weekend at age 100. >> greg: very nice little nerdy lady. all right, let's do it. [laughter] >> jesse: greg's day off, i'm taking tuesday and wednesday off because i think i'm going crazy. now, i could prance around my apartment naked while my wife does yoga, like chris cuomo did who accidentally, accidentally got naked, flexing his body like a jockstrap model. seriously how pathetic is he? i want you guys to go to my website.
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and give me suggestions of what i can do on the east coast for the next two days. i need to eat somewhere outside of a restaurant and a hotel, and will not be pretending to be naked and flexing in history, one, can you follow up with th that? >> juan: what if i told you a 9-year-old can make a big difference? well, look at cameron johnson with her friends in suburban minneapolis 20 minutes from where george floyd was killed. and to help restore damage in the city. take a listen >> i told my mom and idea and she said give the money to the people of minneapolis. and i said that would be a great idea. >> juan: she did great selling
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beaded bracelets between $1.05, and it's called cameron bracelet for friends for unity and justice. it's not just coming from her neighborhood but all over the country and even the president of the university of minnesota said great. ♪ >> bret: from washington i'm bret baier and we are in the courtyard of the department of justice. in just a few minutes i will speak with the attorney general william barr about the latest news across the waterfront and first, other headlines today >> the hometown, the series of memorials reaches its final stop for the funeral and buriall be tuesday. the former minneapolis police officer charged with second-degree murder in floyd's death made the first court appearance today. and set bail for derek chauvin at a million dollars. he is also charged with
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