tv The Five FOX News June 11, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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saving lives, saving businesses and saving families after working hard for 20-30 years. i saw one woman who worked 35 years building the store and one night it was totally wiped out. terrible. and we are renewing our call on congress to finally enact school choice. school choice is a big deal. [applause] because access to education is the civil rights issue of our time. and i've heard that i would say the last year but it really is the civil rights issue of our time. when you can have children go to a school where their parents want him to go. and competition and other schools fight harder because all of a sudden it gets better. so many different ways. but there are groups against that. you have unions against it. you have others against it. they are not against it for the
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right reason. they are against it for a lot of the wrong reasons. we've done a lot of it. we've had tremendous success with choice. we had choice in a lot of ways. we have choice in the military. you know before i came here, the vets would wait in line, pastor. it wouldn't be acceptable to you and i know it wouldn't be acceptable to the bi bishop. but they would wait for company, five, weeks to get in line where they were sick and feeling bad badly. and they got in line to say there is a six day week, a month wait. and you would have people online that weren't very ill and they would be terminally ill before they would get to see a doctor and they would die. and for years and years, they have been trying to get veterans choice. that means if you can't get to a doctor reasonably quickly, you go outside to a local doctor around where you live in the government pays the bill.
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by the way, it sounds expensive but it's very cheap by comparison. it's actually much better. we take care of our vets, by far most importantly. [applause] but it is one of those many cases where it is actually less costly and better. sometimes you will see a building that cost less money than another building because the one who built the one that cost more it looks better. the one that is cheaper looks better. they say how much more did you spend for that? it is cold you have to know what you are doing if you know what you are doing. [laughter] that is only good for the real estate people in here but which are plenty, by the way. so i just want to thank everybody this is a tremendous place, a great city, great, great city. and with tremendous people and tremendous pride. and i say the same for the state of texas. you're governor came to me and he said when you had your bad
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hurricane two years ago. i gave so much money to texas. he kept saying more. [laughter] so finally, we took good care of taxes. we took such good care of taxes. they were looking for the next hurricane. [laughter] [applause] 's they had a big one. they say you had the largest water dump ever. it came in and you thought it was god and then it went back out and it happened three times. in your governor came and he wanted to build a barrier so that water would hit the barrier anan end, into certain parts of texas. we have one more request after giving $28 million. $28 million. but when it comes to taxes, don't watch them too closely. [laughter] and he said, governor, he said one more request and it is a small one, sir. we have a way of building a wall because of pan town, it moves
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with the tides. this sounds expensive to me. it moves with the tide and it's not a lot of money. can i ask you to do me one small favor and approve it? how much is it? sir, it's only $10 billion. [laughter] start working on it, right? start working on it because we can do things to get rid of it. you can get hit hard to hear. you effective very much when you had the hurricane's? >> we had a lot of people displaced that came to this ar area. >> president trump: we took very good care of everybody. this is one of my favorite places and i know we are doing well here. during the last process they kept saying texas is too close to call. my friends in texas say when are you going to win in a landslide? well, they keep saying. [applause] we had one man on television
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actually and he said i don't know where you come from but i don't think this is too close to call. i think we won by a lot. it was 8:00 in the polls were closed. donald trump has won the state of texas. and he said it simultaneously. and we are doing good here again. one of the things i have to say because this is big oil territory, we have done a fantastic job and bring back in a rapid fashion. that would look pretty bad. you had a couple of hours or if you a barrel of oil, you bought it for $37 is that they gave you $37, okay? there's never been nothing like that ever and now it is close to $40 a barrel and back in business. we got it done fast and we got russia together with saudi arabia to cut production. they got it back fast. we are very, very proud of it. the supply changed rapidly with covid-19 or whatever you want to call it. i've never heard so many names.
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30 names you can call this thing. i call it the plague from china. [laughter] [applause] >> it's and it's not good. it could have been stopped in china, but they decided not to do that. we will have to figure that one out, won't we. i just want to thank everybody very much for being here. this is a very spectacular place. i want to introduce attorney general barr and secretary carson to say a few words along with us surgeon general who's been a really young star in the administration and please come if i could, please take over, thank you very much. >> thank you, mr. president. [applause] thank you mr. president and thank you for convening this discussion. i would like to thank the very many precedent leaders, civic leaders, and colleagues from
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law enforcement that are here. that ghastly spectacle in minneapolis was really jarring for the whole nation. and it forced us to confront and think about and reflect on long-standing issues in our nation. those issues, obviously relate to the relationship between law enforcement and the african-american community. but just a step back and take a broader view initially, i've been thinking back, how do we achieve the full american dream for all of the communities? african-american and olympic communities. one of the reasons i'm proud to serve in this administration is because i think the president is moving forward on critical elements necessary to provide and ensure the opportunity. first and foremost, economic growth.
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without growth there is no opportunity. second -- [applause] >> ag barr: second, education. i think condoleezza rice said it is the civil rights issue of our time because without a good education, they are not allowing our young people to seize their opportunities and pursue their dreams. [applause] and asked the president mentioned, it is only by empowering parents and giving them the power to choose the education for their children that we will ever be able to obtain that. third, i think it is moral discipline. our young people, they have to have the discipline to seize the opportunity and to make momentary sacrifices for later again. and traditionally, that has come and people can find it perhaps from many sources, but
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traditionally, that has come from religion, which our founders believed was the foundation of the republic. [applause] and we have to stop policies that undermine religion or relegate religion out of the public square. [applause] and now, get to my job which is safely. without safety, you cannot have progress. you cannot have a life come a decent life in a community. and this was struck home to me 30 years ago when i visited trenton when i was attorney general last time and i went to a small barbershop in an african-american neighborhood. there were people there in their 60s and 70s and they said, mr. barr, we are in our golden years and we are living behind bars. look down the street. all of the bars are on error
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windows. the criminals run free on the street. now, we have made a lot of progress. and the crime rate has been cut in half. a big part of that has been improvement in policing. in the progress we have made in policing and yes i'm with the progress the police departments have made in building relationships with the community. i think law enforcement has understood for a long time that there is this trust in the african-american community towards law enforcement system. when you reflect on our history, you can understand why. because most of our history up until the last 60 years, the institutions in this country, the laws and the institutions were explicitly discriminatory. there was not equal protection of the law by the law. it's only been since jim crow that our laws have been changed to provide for equal justice. what we had really since the civil rights effort to come up
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until that time was to tear down institutions. but i don't think now is the time to be tearing down the institutions. because we have been on a march for the last 50 years of reforming our institutions. we don't need to tear them down. we have to be mature about this and when we see problems, we have to redouble our efforts to reform our institutions and make sure they are in sync with our values. i don't think anyone who is honest will deny that we've made a lot of progress in policing over the last 50 years. and in fact, you know, one of the things about this episode in minneapolis was how fast the state and federal law enforcement responded to dealing with that action. so i think that while we saw something very bad, it has helped perhaps galvanize the will of the country to bring good out of that.
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and we can't let that incident obscure the fact that progress has been made, that policeman are by and large by overwhelmingly majority good, decent people that care about their community and put their lives on the line for us, and their neighbors. [applause] and we can't lose sight of the fact and can't let this event obscure the fact that the real oppression and danger to our communities comes more from violent crime and lawlessness than it does from the police. [applause] now we have never -- we've never had a president who is more committed to reforming law enforcement and he's done that with a first step back and
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the first police commission since lyndon johnson. i'm very optimistic about what we will be able to do, given his leadership, but also, given the leadership of the police forces. which around the country increasingly have become better and better led. to addressing the issues that we saw in minneapolis and completing the process of professionalizing policing in this country. and as the president said, we are working on a number of things, the commission he set up and also an executive order that propels that process even faster by looking at how we can encourage the adoption. >> jesse: calling the left out for their push to defund the police. trump counter that message by saying america needs to invest more money in police training. take a look. >> radical efforts to defund, dismantle and disband the police. they want to get rid of the police forces. they actually want to get rid of
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it. that is what they do and that is where they go. you know that because at the top position, there will not be much leadership here there's not much leadership left. instead, we have to go the opposite way. we must invest more energy and resources in police training and recruiting and community engagement. we have to respect our police. we have to take care of our police. if they are allowed to do their job, they will do a great job. >> jesse: that comes as we have an out-of-control situation in seattle. radical leftists have taken over, occupying roughly six block area around the city hall and declaring it a police free autonomous zone. the protesters vowing to stay in their makeshift city until the government meets their long list of demands, including the total dismantling of the police, the feed the gentrification of seattle, free college for all washington state residents, and
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the removal of all confederate statutes. president trump calling these agitators domestic terrorists and blasting democrats in charge for letting it happen. washington state governor jay inslee claims that not even know about the hostile takeover. okay. greg, welcome back. we missed you so, so very much. >> greg: i missed you too. >> jesse: a haircut. very, very jealous. i don't want to downplay the situation in seattle. man, i'm not going to say it because i don't want to boost your ego. i don't want to downplay the situation in seattle because it is a dicey situation, but it is kind of amusing that these very band of pranksters are asking for these ridiculous lists of commands. they are extorting small business owners. they even had their food stolen. they are complaining about it in
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their police free zone. >> greg: we went to the autozone to the autonomous zone. there is a direct link in there. i heard people speak about it. you know, i love it and i live it for three reasons. in the old days, if you had a teenager caught smoking, what did you do? you made them smoked two packs of cigarettes. you do the same thing with the far left. you have them indulge the very sin that they only toyed with. you make them do it. you make them create the reality that they claim they really want. and what if it works? what if all the people you don't like move to samaria, build a wall and it's also great they are into walls now, they build a wall in nobody in, nobody out and actually works. i was thinking about the secession. they are succeeding. i love it. the internally woke needs to see what happens when all of the things that they believe are created by elves, food, toilet
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paper, bullets, whatever, suddenly disappear. and then this experiment leaves them without anything to defend themselves when they turn on each other. lastly, i salute these people. they are appeasers. they aren't the leftist celebrities who put out these appeasement videos, you know standing up to hate and saying you should defund other communities. those people are cowards. they did that, by the way to save their mansions from being looted. this is real because they are following what they say. and they already have a warlord. that is kind of impressive. i, myself am warlord of fox news extorting now. [laughter] i am. >> jesse: well said george clooney. >> greg: i will be benevolent. >> jesse: i highly doubt that. so dana how does jay inslee the governor not know what's going
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on in seattle? shouldn't he know what is going on in seattle if he is the governor? >> dana: what is worse is that he doesn't know about autonomous zone being declared in his city. one of the biggest cities in the state where that he does know about it. and is doing nothing about it. take your pick, what is worse? i wish so much olivia could have been on a zoom call with me this morning when peter mcmahon, my husband was talking about this. he had so many ideas for what could happen. one of them i really like. he said look if you are in an autonomous zone and you can't possibly be connected to the water supply any longer. also, the electric supply, yeah, sorry, we will not be able to do that. the food, we can't import food into you because there is a license to do that. so yeah, we have to take a pass on that but good luck to you out
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there. >> jesse: it looks like they are trying to plant crops in this little zone over there is and they poured a bunch of soil on the grass and put god knows what in it and starting to water it with a watering can. how long do you think they last out there? >> juan: i think, you know, like your analogy come with the pranksters. these are a people who got involved remember with when there was a protest against the dash what was that -- the world trade organization, the wto, remember that? after wall street. they look for opportunities. >> dana: but they weren't violent. >> juan: i think it is illegal, dana for anybody to do legal stuff or occupy in a city you shouldn't be doing it. but from what i read, this is no sort of grand, organized terrorist pier that is the word used by the president. there is no such thing going on. reporters on the ground say it
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is more like a block party. people drawing chalk things on the street, people having poetry readings my free speech readings and an old hippie get together, you know? i think we have to tone it down a second. you might give the audience and impression that oh, my gosh, some terrorist coming to take over. the seattle police are the ones who closed the police precinct. it could be met could be the governor doesn't know about this. >> dana: actually, the chief of police said that was not her decision. the chief of police said that was not her decision that she did not want to abandon the precinct. >> juan: i don't know about the cheap at the precinct captain. he said he is negotiating with them about, oh, yeah we need to come back at some point but my big point to you, trump is wrong to conflate what is going on there with peaceful protesters all over the country. he is just trying to distract us. >> jesse: just another
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distraction when people take over 30 blocks and make a bunch of ridiculous demands. so you have to defend the police controversy. also with like these takeovers of city blocks, emily, how do you think this plays tuned normal americans watching this at home? >> emily: probably pretty horrifying. i live in seattle. i will share with you guys what i know what is going on here. this is totally different than anything in the past. people are citing the successful past occupation here in seattle, certain buildings and including one that lasted eight years, by the way. but to me that shows a history of disorganized and unresponsive leadership peer that is wind none is surprised about governor jay inslee. it is alarming they didn't know about it but it is worthless, totally disorganized and totally confused. i spent at length talking to a police officer stationed at the precinct from the first violent takeover until the day of abandonment. he said the first day was the
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craziest day of his career and not only a level of vitriol and violence from bricks and and and explosives being thrown, but also the energy and the type of energy. he cited it seemed clear there was a type of organization that had piggybacked on and had taken advantage of the perfect storm leading up to this. and the media is portraying this what i am hearing as you guys are talking about this peaceful hippie protest giving out free masks and also the guys running around with ak-47s. he said they are there and everything in between. the socialist are getting booed by the guys saying kill the cops and work to help patrol. the reality is the local and state government is waiting for someone else to come in and help her for it to just go away. this officer said he was praying for federal intervention because we are not equipped to manage the situation at all. someone is going to get hurt when it is finally to come back. the reason it's not violent yet,
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there is only one type of people there. they are in control. we stand as a community, but not with this. >> jesse: all right, we should send you out there tomorrow, emily to file a report for us. good luck. coming up, cancel hurled jurors again. life tv just got pulled off of the air. what could be next? ♪ as a struggling actor,
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♪ >> greg: live pd has been polled. the show was a hit with the unspeakable truth that cops are human. maybe that is why it was canceled and showing the place has hardworking folks facing unpredictable and sometimes dangerous circumstances. because that didn't fit the current narrative, it got pulled. the real censorship doesn't arrive with hypocrisy but the emasculation of network execs. here is an idea, replace live pd with no pd to show crimes committed without cops around. oh, yeah, that was a riot. but the network made sure not to show much of that. so will live pd come back? not when the media sees police as somehow worse than criminals. live pd's crime is showing
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reality of policing ignored by other networks where cops are relentlessly heroic or defiantly bad. so ame canceled it, censorship out of fear. do you know that up to 440,000 americans die each year from preventive hospital errors? the third leading cause in the u.s. so shall we cancel "grey's anatomy" and all those other hospital programs that show health care workers in an aspirational glow? and believe me, i all of this knowing full well live pd was my competition. they put up great numbers every saturday night and i should be thrilled that they got knocked out of the lineup. i could be number one. but that is stupid and wrong because i may not be number one. i may be next. so jesse, you were a big fan of the show and i was iffy because i didn't like live programming showing people at their worst circumstances, you know, when
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you are drunk and do something stupid. >> jesse: that is like to show. [laughter] >> greg: yes, it is. so i always felt a big lesson from live pd was how substances played a role in like 90% of these conflicts. somebody is wasted and that unravels. it is a lesson. >> jesse: it shows you the human condition, especially when you got to see the methamphetamines and heroin that ravaged large parts of the country. like you said to commit human eyes as the police. it gave you a crash course in criminal law. if you get pulled over for the small amount of cannabis, you don't have to resist or run away. relax. and if you are cooperative and polite and respectful, the police usually give you a pass. "live pd" was the truth. it was live, unscripted, unedited programming.
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isn't that what we want? don't we want millions of americans to be watching what the cops are doing on the weekend? don't we want transparency, body cameras, full accountability? this is what this was, a million in the demo and almost as good as you greg, million in a demo. which is astounding and shows you how many people watch the show. a black americans, white americans, hispanic-americans because every hour one of the bystanders of the subject would look at the camera and say "live pd," what up? it was probably internal pressure that came. because there was no boycotted tim spear there was no mass insurrection on social media. i think they panicked at a&e and made cops look good or they were guilty or just scared, but this hurts social justice. this doesn't help social justice. >> greg: you know, juan i call it censorship which i realize
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the strict definition is not because this is private companies. they can cancel a show whenever they want, but it is a form of censorship when people decide to close something down because they are scared of come i don't know, the media? it is an external pressure that causes you to run away. it is a different, a new kind of censorship. >> juan: so i have a different take, greg. i was thinking maybe it is internal pressure and may be an act of consciousness. may be attuned to the fact that in the culture right now is so uncomfortable with the relationship that the police have with so many in the black community but in the community in general in terms of the use of excessive force. so they say it's just not right now. by the way, i predicted to jesse that a&e wouldn't canceled the show because the show was popular. i think it is the number 1 show
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on a&e. >> greg: yes, it is. >> juan: they took a real step, a real sacrifice by doing this. but from my perspective it oftentimes results in a very negative portrayal not only of black people but with tino's, even poor white people. obviously, they are not going into big law firms in planning a drug dealer in the bathroom. this of street crime so a heavy load of people in the streets. into my mind, you know i can say this directly to all of you. would you want a tv camera in your face on the worst day of your life? would you want that to be seen by all of america, the worst day of your life? i just think that shows basically what it boils down to, kind of, you know a peek look at people and their most distressed, awful condition. >> greg: i always felt like i agree with that part, but i don't think that is the reason why it is being canceled.
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emily come i want to play you a clip from president trump that we just heard moments ago about what would happen if we didn't have police. >> i'm thinking what happens late at night when you make that call to 911 and there was nobody there? what do you do? whether white, black, or anybody else, what do you do? you are darling and somebody breaking into your house. that happens to be a violent person? >> greg: emily you have a choice and you can discuss that topic or the topic we were talking about on "live pd"? it is up to you. >> emily: thank -- thank you. we need more footage and not less. i want people to understand 24 hours after voluntary surrender of mother state and women's jails on christmas at prisons, everything. what is printed on the outside, going to the cafeterias and the public needs to see the see the entire criminal justice system and not less. >> greg: you know, dana this is a program owned by dan abrams and also owned something called
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media hike. i'm sure that won't get canceled, but he's a liberal. he is a thoughtful, liberal democrat. and he's being eaten alive by his own. >> dana: so, what is interesting is i think in some of the proposed legislation, federal money did not go to the police departments that do not have everybody in body cams. right? so this footage is important in some ways, right? so they will want that. i have a hard time ever watching any of these shows because i hated the feeling is that i got from it. i would get so nervous for everybody. i remember getting pulled over one time for speeding tickets, and i was mortified. i wanted to punish myself. i feel bad for abrams because i think he had a good product and they made a decision, this will disappoint a lot of people. >> greg: you were right to be
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nervous, dana, pulled over speeding. you left out the fact that you had two bodies in the trunk. [laughter] so back in the days when you were roaming the countryside, taking off drifters. coming up -- one of my doing? joe biden coming out of his basement to push conspiracy theories. we will tell you more next. ♪
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♪ >> emily: welcome back. job item pushing more about president trump. trafficking in some of the overtop claims about the president. take a look. >> it is my greatest concern, my single greatest concern, this tragic will try to steal this election. this is a guy that said all mail in ballots or fraudulent. direct voting by mail will while he sits behind a desk in the oval office and writes in his
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mail in ballot to vote in the primary. >> emily: dana i would like to start with you what benefit doeg this? >> dana: well, i think the white house press secretary had a strong message against this and suggesting that he should not float these conspiracy theories. and terry mccullum the governor of virginia, democrat yesterday on a zoom call and we have the video suggesting biden is doing fine in the basement. he doesn't need to go out and do anything. his numbers are going up as trump goes down. why do that? when biden goes out and says things like that it undermines trump. i will say this, emily i am for a moratorium but all french and conspiracy theories on all sides. it doesn't help anyone. i think the other thing that you will see though is there will be a concentrated effort by democrats to talk about voter suppression and the problems that happened in georgia on
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tuesday and that voting. they were atrocious, really bad. but make no mistake, the counties in charge of all of those districts where that voting, they are mostly run by democrats. i don't think it is necessarily a partisan issue but incompetence. it is about four and a half months to get it right all across the country or you will see a lot of conspiracy theories out there. >> emily: greg, biden would like to meet judges for current actions but not for his past. what is he doing right now of substance other than words? >> greg: first off, it is kind of interesting that dana wants moratorium on conspiracies. who asked you to do that, was it q? [laughter] any way, joke with the thing about joe biden from everything he says his old. have you ever noticed he has never had an original thought in his head, which is weird because there is so much space in there for some. he reminds me of the old vacuum cleaner. he goes around scooping up parts
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of ideas and things that he's heard and kind mixed up inside, the bag and sometimes the bag splits and stuff go shooting out. what did he just say? and then you watch the liberals who are interviewing him because they so don't want him to screw up. it's like they have a drunk in the living room and putting all the expensive stuff away so he doesn't knock it over. and he simply got it into the couch. that i biden. they get him in through, slow, out the door from the basement. >> emily: juan what strategy do you see behind this? >> juan: o come i think it is pretty clear. joe biden is articulating concern of many democrats because they see president trump self-serving erratic behavior. you stop and think about you know, what happened in lafayette
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square park, using irritating chemicals. since the white house doesn't like pepper spray. the same thing, okay, pepper spray, smoke bombs to clear out peaceful protesters, you know, maligning, defaming a 75-year-old who is pushed over by the police and buffalo and bleeding on the ground and unattended by the police. he calls at night some kind of horrible name and terrorists, i mean and because he's with a terrorist group. this is erratic behavior. and i think today, even mark might lead the joint chief of staff apologize for even being in lafayette square being a part of the erratic behavior against peaceful americans. you know he said he is the post of troops with essentially the defense of mark esper said. and he just about been fired by trump. so people think, gosh, he's not going to stop. he's not going to acknowledge losing.
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>> emily: jesse, take us home. >> jesse: i just don't know why joe biden would insinuate that donald trump wouldn't lose gracefully. when you think about it, donald trump has always adhered directly to that the core of tradition to the presidency. right? here is what everybody needs to see. remember that moment when the incoming president sits right next down to the outgoing president? and there is a gaggle of reporters there? can you imagine the humiliation of donald trump's face and... he loses to sleepy joe and has to sit next to him in that moment? i can almost more imagine donald trump refusing to leave the white house than i can him sitting there and torturing himself like that. so little piece of advice. here is my advice for donald trump. just take out an insurance policy on him. spy on his campaign. sabotage the transition, then have some of your holdovers,
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just, you know, special counsel investigation. that is okay apparently. one last point. till his no reporter asked joe biden why he unmasked mike flynn? like seriously? we have and asked him that yet? it's been like a month. let's go. >> emily: you have to invite him on your show again. again, america is slowly reopening. stay with us and find out next. ♪ is a time for action. so, for a second time we're giving members a credit on their auto insurance. because it's the right thing to do. we're also giving payment relief options to eligible members so they can take care of things like groceries before they worry about their insurance or credit card bills. right now is the time to take care of what matters most. like we've done together, so many times before. discover all the ways we're helping members at usaa.com/coronavirus
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♪ >> dana: america is slowly getting back to business and "the five" to get out and about and of course we are being safe. i played a little tennis, that is what i did. we don't have time to hear about the great thing she did with your two code days off, greg. >> greg: first of all we have to get out of the boxes and back into the studio if we really are reopening. let's face it, this is getting really boring. you know what i did while i was away? i got a haircut and then i went shooting. i purchased a shotgun and my wife and i went upstate and met an instructor mark central left
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who is an amazing, certified instructor to teach us how to st guns. thanks, mark. i have a theory that my wife actually is a russian spy because before we did all this, she was going, oh come i will not have a gun in the house. i will never shoot a gun. no, no, no. we get to the range and there are four handguns and within 5 minutes, she is shooting a block one-handed, shouldn't the block one-handed, hitting a bull's-eye at 30 yards. [laughter] she is a spy! >> dana: be american. >> greg: i'm telling you come american. >> dana: jesse, you went out to dinner? >> jesse: yeah, i did, evelyn was happy not to cook. we went to the black spends steak house in long island. and so you walk into the restaurant and you have to wear a mask and once you get outside, the outside patio you take the
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mask off of it all the waiters, they wear masks, gloves, no menu, you see it on your phone. a great dinner and i'm a little hung over because i was overserved, let's put it that way. [laughter] >> greg: when aren't you? >> dana: emily, is there anybody you want to give a shout out to? >> emily: we had a great day and her cabin and that was a wonderful way to relax. >> dana: all right, juan, take us home here. >> juan: i read today somebody is charging $1,000 per haircuts because everybody is backed up on haircuts. you know, that is gross consumption. i don't see at this time, dana, the stock market, i just don't see it. it is wonderful that jesse got out. >> dana: it is capitalism, juan, god bless america. >> greg: blanket juan.
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even hanging with your dog. so, what are you waiting for? download now and get your first stock on us. robinhood. ♪ >> jesse: time now for "one more thing," greg gutfeld. >> greg: let's do this, greg security news. as you can tell, i'm doing everything i can to keep my family safe, including purchasing a guard dog. check out this fellow. you were going to be surprise when you see this monster. oh, yeah, look at that guy. you know what? he will just stop crying. he will stop crime with his sheer a durability. look at that. anyway. awe! >> jesse: you don't even need a shotgun. juan you are up. >> juan: hey, everybody,
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listen to this song. ♪ that is the arlington high school choir in washington state singing "rise up" hear the song featured at this year's graduation but the choir decided to dedicate it to students of color and schoolwide span against racism. the principal duane fish said it will let all students know but especially the black students that the school understands the need for change and most of all loves them. what an inspirational loving expanse for the students and everyone. >> jesse: for those of you guys who makes you mow the lawn or adults that don't want to pay an arm and a leg for landscaping, we figured out how to molehills. this is a serious mow hack right here. why work harder when you can work smarter? [laughter] if everybody just zigs back and
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forth, no, it is vertical. this guy he has mastered it. dana. >> dana: i love that. so coronavirus has caused a lot of things to be disrupted. juan showed us and another group warriors and quiet veterans who are basically to do fly-fishing and recreational therapy in montana and they couldn't go out this year. so the organization figured out a way to do virtual fishing experience and got veterans with guides to get them sent out to all of their equipment so they can go out where they are, learn the basics of fishing, how-to videos. it is really a special organization that does amazing work, warriors and quiet waters and if you think you can benefit from that, i recommend it to. >> jesse: all right, emily really quick. let's see what you got. >> emily: i love that, dana a video with a man has gone viral
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except it's not a panda commit is a dog. ha ha. i thought that was cool. >> jesse: sorry, nice, quick but not quick enough. that is it for us, "special report" is up next. good evening, and bret baier, and president trump says the u.s. must invest more in police training and cannot make progress by labeling millions of americans as racist. the president will be speaking to my colleague harris faulkner shortly and we will have parts of the interview very soon. president trump is in texas preparing for a private fund-raiser after addressing community leaders in dallas where he made his case for expanded african-american opportunity in a post-pandemic world. in the meantime, the financial world took multiple hits today with more disappointing jobs news and that dowels worst day since march, a loss of
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