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tv   The Five  FOX News  June 29, 2020 2:00pm-3:01pm PDT

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what's not clear is whether the president ever knew about it or the high-ranking security officials knew about it or dismissed it and never passed it along. we just don't know yet. that will do it here. here comes "the five." ♪ >> jesse: i'm jesse watters with dana perino, dan bongino, capri cafaro and emily compile. it's 5:00 in new york city and this is "the five." another weekend of lawlessness in america as violence continues to spike in democrat run cities. in new york, 18 people were shot in 24 hours. a mob hurled bottles at police. 62 people shot in chicago, 15 fatally including a 10-year-old girl and a boy under 2.
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seattle's cop free zone saw another deadly shooting while protesters consider a takeover of the neighborhood abandoned. the city's police chief's had enough. >> it's more important that this neighborhood is not under siege and they are not people being victimized. there are people who live here, multiple people being injured and hurt and we need to do something about it. it's absolutely irresponsible. >> jesse: the president is calling for law and order. the white house announcing the arrest of over 100 anarchists including four men who tried to tear down a statue of andrew jackson in washington, d.c. dana perino. i feel left out. i'm the only one without a vowel at the end of my name. what you think when you hear the police chief of seattle's thing it is sad and dangerous and we need help?
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>> dana: carmen vest has become one of my go-to people to listen to because she is so poised and dignified and you can tell why she went into public service come into police work. she wants to help people. she wants to serve her community and what i think is quite galling, she is representative of many police chiefs across america feeling that their elected leadership is not backing them up. she is out there really on her own. it is as shocking and sad way to see a city like seattle treat their police chief who is someone that we should all hold up. this is an african-american woman. she has risen to the top of her profession. she has the respect of her fellow officers, but she doesn't have the support of her local elected leadership. what is alarming is it's not just seattle. across the country. pictures out of out of new york remind you of what you saw before the broken windows,
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policing ideology and theory went into effect in the giuliani years who have benefited all of us who love new york including the people who live there in those neighborhoods who desperately wanted more police protection back then. i'm increasingly alarmed, jesse. i think we might live in a community right now where everything seems fine. but if you give an inch, they will take a mile for lawlessness. so protecting everybody has to be at the highest concern. these local officials, the local elected leaders really need to be held to account and asked, where do you stand? they could come on "the daily briefing." i will ask them. >> jesse: you look at the pictures of people throwing things at squad cars. between that and the coronavirus, i don't think new york city is ever going to be the same after the second term of bill de blasio with what's going on there.
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>> dan: of the public safety debate is a debate like no other. it's not like a tax debate because liberals can lie. media people can say that reagan cut taxes and we wound up with a massive deficit. it was because we spent a lot of money, not because of tax cuts. you can do that with public safety. you can say to someone living in east new york brooklyn were i was a police officer, everything is great in your neighborhood but there's a guy out in front of your house slinging drugs. you can't do it. threatening your kids. i hope everybody gets what i'm talking about. it's a different debate. you can turn people into one issue voters almost overnight. how do i know? it's already happened in new york city. you all were probably there or you are familiar with the david dinkins era. when crime was out of control, thousands of people were murdered on the streets of new york city. what happened? rudolph giuliani runs as a republican. a city that student one democrats. he wins, not by huge landslide
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and then wins reelection by one of the biggest landslides in the mayor shape race in new york city's history as a republican because people saw the drug dealer on their corner was gone. democrats are in hot water and if president trump stays consistent on this law and order track meets positioning himself to win. i set on your show arrest everyone of them, anyone of these vandals, anyone who assaulted someone, get it on tape and let everyone in america c. drop them out of the back of the police precinct and invite the camera to see it and say, this is your fate next. you protest. god bless you. you break the law. you're going to jail. >> jesse: they have made 100 arrests of these antifa and radicals. we haven't seen the perp walks but we know they're not going to be pretty. what a crew.
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>> emily: right. this spike in violence and especially gun violence was predictable. after the last five to seven years there's been some of the agencies and departments that put in hard work to build trust and transparency in their communities. they went from a warrior mind-set tomorrow regarding mind-set and that's being totally obliterated by the vilification of law enforcement. police chiefs across the country, to dan's point, are urging their rank and file and working with them, don't give up. stay motivated and stay reassured. especially the silent victims. they are the ones we are not hearing from but they are being totally hamstrung by these incompetent, weak local elected leaders and mayors who are castrating police chiefs and departments. people embolden to lawlessness, having to treat so-called protesters with kid gloves while we watch them get bash in the face on social media videos with bottles. they have to back down from
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enforcement actions because they are under the claw of the capitulating mayors. there was a lawsuit filed by small business owners next to chop in seattle. the first two pages of the lawsuit, small business owners thing don't worry, we stand behind the protesters. they have to go on and on to make sure that their livelihoods aren't targeted and obliterated even further. the one that struck out to me and all you need to know about seattle's mayor is these guy said we did not take the steps lightly and we only proceeded with this after weeks that our security and wellness issues, raising concerns to city leadership was meant only with silence. >> jesse: i wonder if people like the mayor of seattle, they are going to get kicked out of office, some of other liberal mayors seeing this big surge in crime. i wonder if they are going to pay a price and have the kind of david dinkins-giuliani
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transition that we saw in new york. >> capri: only time will tell. people setting up things like chop. there are a lot of democrats who don't support these kind of extreme measures. there's a lot of people that don't support, that are democrats, they are leaning left and they don't support the defund the police movement. there are smart public policy conversations we need to have about the rule of law enforcement things like responding to individuals that may be suicidal or a circumstance that might be -- or a drug overdose. these things might be better served from a social service agency and let law enforcement focus on actually getting criminals and protecting the public rather than doing some of these other social service type of jobs. i think we need to have a smart conversation. right now we are not and we are getting distracted by extremists when i think a lot of rank-and-file democrats want to have a real conversation about how we lived everyone up and how
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we actually have solution oriented policies to make sure law enforcement is doing their job and social service and other agencies are making sure that they are dealing with the underlying problems that are contributing to some of these issues. whatever chaz is, it needs to go home. >> jesse: to your point about the response to people o.d. i don't know if that's the real underlying issue that cop shows up when someone oldies on heroin but we can have that discussion another day. up next, coronavirus cases spiking across the country. governor andrew cuomo trashes the white house. i like liberty mutual. they get that no two people are alike and customize your car insurance so you only pay for what you need. what do you think? i don't see it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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♪ >> dana: a new spiking new covid-19 cases forcing over a dozen states to rollback their reopening plans and prompting calls for more testing across the country. more than 2.5 million americans have now been infected and more than 125,000 have died. the trump administration says the window on containing the virus is closing. >> this is a very, very serious situation in the window is closing for us to take action and get this under control. >> dana: after becoming the country's first coronavirus hot spot, new york governor andrew cuomo now has some harsh words for the white house. >> the white house has been in denial on coronavirus from the get-go. and the federal response has just been wrong from day one. they told you they didn't believe it was a problem.
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>> dana: all right, jesse o. let me give you a chance to respond to cuomo. keeping with the theme. >> jesse: yeah, i don't know. cuomo is now lashing out after he was begging donald trump to save him and new york the last three months. i think it's pretty irresponsible and just nakedly political. that's what i expect from politicians, whatever. you are seeing a rise in cases but you're also seeing a steady decline in deaths. that's a very good news and we should all focus on it. it does look like the new cases are going from east to west and from north to south. a lot of the southern states are now getting a lot of new cases. but hospitalizations are not up that badly, so that's good news. it looks like what happened, as governor desantis explained what happened in florida, the new rising cases is not because businesses opened. the new rising cases is because
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people have let their guards down and they have not been social distancing. he was talking about a bar he saw the other day in florida, completely packed. people shoulder to shoulder, no masks. you can only do as well as the people do. this is really up to the people to maintain social distance, where the masks come and wash their hands and be responsible. no phase one, two, or three guidelines are going to be respected if people don't do that. also the other thing you're seeing is its people in their 20s. those are the people that are ending it. i don't know if we are getting closer to a herd immunity or what. but again, it's not all people dying likely saw it early on in the pandemic. >> dana: dan, i know you live in florida. i'm sure you weren't at that bar that governor desantis talked about but tell us a little bit about what it's like or what you are hearing on the ground. >> dan: we have had some personal experience in our inner
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circle of friends just recently with this. i can't be as nice, jesse. very well restrained. i don't have your temperament. cuomo sucks. can we be honest? he sucks. he's awful. you can be nice and kind. i am guest hosting so i'm just going to say it. you are stuck with me tomorrow but the rest of the week you can recover. this guy sucks. he is a liar. he is he lying fraud. are we doing numbers anymore? serious question. >> dana: we can do numbers. >> dan: i know because you are an honest broker. the death rate in new york for 100,000 people is a tragic 161 people. new york. andrew cuomo, for the liberals listening where a tough time with facts. florida is 15. i know liberals can't do math but that's ten times less than andrew cuomo. ron desantis' count dracula and andrew cuomo dares go on television and say president trump really screwed
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us over? one more number because i know liberals have titanium coated skulls. europe's death rate per 100,000 people is also higher. not you, capri. you are very smart. a lot of liberals out there. europe's death rate is dramatically higher for 100,000. united states is a fraction. this guy stinks. he is a clown and a joker. they should pull his microphone. >> dana: a lot of it, capri, the death rate in new york compared to florida which has a very high population of elderly people. in new york, that decision early on about sending positive elderly patients back to nursing homes to be cared for with coronavirus when the nursing homes were not prepared. it is a shocking decision but even more so. over and over again governor cuomo does interviews where he just skates by. do you think it will have a long-term effect on the
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democrats? >> capri: i think it's going to have a long-term effect on andrew cuomo and his legacy because at the beginning of this people looked to andrew cuomo and revered his response to the covid-19 pandemic, presenting himself as a leader and calm and power points and all the rest. we were kind of learning as we were going along. this is something completely new. to make mistakes, on the front end, i guess it could be expected but these are mistakes that have deadly consequences including the in-laws of someone that we knew at fox news because of this issue with the nursing homes. it's a vulnerable population of just because they are old just because they are vulnerable doesn't mean there are any less valuable. that goes for individuals immunocompromise like my sister and others. we need to be serious about this. i believe in personal responsibility, if you don't want to wear a helmet when you're on a motorcycle, that's on you. but wear a mask to protect others, not only their health
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with the economy and people if -- if people don't start wearing masks, we are going to shut down again in the economy is going to go in the tank. >> dana: there is some economic consequences to this, emily and i thought of you today. this thursday in new jersey, the restaurants were going to be allowed to open for indoor dining at 25% capacity and they are looking forward to that because they want to meet their numbers in the summer, trying to catch up from the lost business. today governor murphy of new jersey pulled in back. now all that planning is out the window for now. >> emily: right, and we have seen it sweeping across the country. that means there's no revenue, drastically undercut revenue. their obligations in their debt hasn't changed. it's probably going up, as they said on their assets may have to pay their rent. i think what this illustrates is that these local officials and governors really need to be nimble and also reasonable.
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this is why trusted media sources are so valuable. to echo those statistics, in new york, the death rate is 20 times higher than that of texas. we have been hearing reports that texas is being overwhelmed in their icus. as congressman crenshaw said today on this network, there it's nowhere near true. they have room for thousands more. it's incumbent upon all of us to make sure we are behaving as citizens, as americans, treating it as a marathon, not a sprint so our leaders can hopefully make those reasonable, nimble decisions as the covid virus ebbs and flows. we knew that would be inevitable and the final point, i echo what everyone is saying. wear a mask, be socially distanced, be responsible. it will enable leaders to make those decisions that take into account all the data points, including the economic factors so that as soon as there is listing available we can get back on her feet. >> dana: and get people back in school. the american academy
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pediatrician said kids should go back to school in class this fall. that was maybe hopeful news for people waiting to hear about that. up next, democrats attacking president trump and demanding a new russia investigation, this time over a reported bounty on u.s. troops. how the white house is responding, next. can my side be firm?
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and it doesn't stop there we're also here to help look ahead that's why we're helping members catch up by spreading any missed usaa insurance payments over the next twelve months so you can keep more cash in your pockets for when it matters most and that's just one of the many ways we're here to help the military community find out more at usaa.com ♪ >> dan: the democrats have found their new russia scandal. president trump on the white house disputed reports russian intelligence officials offered bounties to taliban linked militants to kill u.s. troops in afghanistan. the white house saying that the president and vice president were never briefed about. >> there is no consensus in the intelligence community alleys allegations and there are dissenting opinions from some in the intelligence community with regards to their veracity
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of what's being reported on the veracity of the underlying allegations continue to be evaluated. i would point you to the absolutely irresponsible decision in "the new york times" to falsely report that he was briefed on something that he in fact was not briefed on. >> dan: of course democrats are calling for investigations, since speaker pelosi is hyping a conspiracy theory. >> this is as bad as it gets and yet the president will not confront the russians on this score. denies being grieved. whether he was or not, his administration knows. as i have said with the president, with him, all roads lead to putin. i don't know what the russians have on the president personal personally, politically, financially or whatever it is. >> dan: how many times are we going to do this lucy football trick with the rushing foreign policy stories. >> jesse: at least things are
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back to normal. trump is getting accused of being a russian agent. i guess things are starting to look like they used to. here's what they do. it's so well scripted and orchestrated intelligence leak to do two things. one, when you have some sort of heater in the intelligence community that takes a piece of raw, unverified intelligence that no one is agreed upon his troop and then they leak it to a "new york times" reporter and then spin it and lie about the back of the president has been briefed on it to make the president look weak against russia or the fact that russia has something on him. so it creates this russian cloud around the president. that's the first thing. the second thing it accomplishes is it keeps the president tied down in afghanistan. there's a lot of people that want the united states to stay in afghanistan. the russians want the united states to stay tied down in afghanistan. there's a lot of people in, arms
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contractors, a lot of ideologues. a lot of people in the foreign policy community, they want us in afghanistan. the taliban hasn't attacked u.s. soldiers since february since that so-called truce was signed. it keeps the post-cold war order together in a way that people can stay prosperous and the line is clearly drawn. >> dan: i'm confused. >> jesse: it's just another lie. >> capri: i'm supposed to get you un-confused? >> dan: the story appears to be fake. not that the russians paid the taliban but that president trump was briefed. where was the media outrage when the obama administration actually did pay the "death to america" iranians? the media loses credibility when
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they do that. >> capri: there's plenty of outrage certainly from a lot of people that i know that are still mad about the iran deal. i can't speak to the media. the problem frankly is that our institutions are not trusted and they are broken and they are broken on both sides of the aisle and both left and right media and it's just another example of the cracks -- the foundations of our system. this is obviously incredibly serious. if there's any truth to what russia has done, it needs to be verified. it needs to be examined. it needs to be followed up on and we need to act appropriately as a nation and treat russia as an adversary because our troops should never be put in harm's way. they shouldn't have a bounty on their heads. but here's the thing, we don't know 100%. we need to not jump to conclusions whether it's democrats jumping to conclusions on the media jumping to conclusions and we also need to talk about undermining the institutions. now we see the white house
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saying the intelligence community hasn't verified this or it's conflicting statements but we've also seen president trump previously not trust the intelligence community. so do we trust the intelligence community or not? frankly the american public is consuming this and they don't know what to believe and i think that's why we see such a divided nation. >> dan: there is nothing to trust. he wasn't briefed, according to the story. dana, you have been the face of the white house at the podium. have you ever seen a volume of intelligence community leaks like you have under this administration? it's outrageous. >> dana: you kind of lose track but i am definitely old enough to remember with the national intelligence estimate came out around 2007 and there was a footnote that suggested that the united states of america and the position of the president of the united states was that iran was not seeking to try to give nuclear weapon which was not true. dan, we went to the middle east to meet with world leaders to
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explain to them that wasn't our position. that's how bad back kind of thing can be. when i first saw the story, i thought three things can be true at the same time. number one, it's not out of the realm of possibility that putin would do this. and i don't necessarily think it's just about what's happening in afghanistan. we are in the middle of a proxy war with russia on a lot of different frauds. we'll member what happened between the united states military the russian soldiers in syria a year or so ago that was the right thing to do that president trump order that mission. the second thing that could also be true is that this is not verified or that one person heard something in another intelligence agency is not really sure, there's conflicting information, and so you get one leak and then you have this problem that jesse was pointing out. the third thing they can be true is that politically the democrats will pick this up and run with it. they already have ads out. all of those things can be true with the same time and i think that the white house is right to
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do the briefings. they had members of congress there today, republican members of congress. steny hoyer, the democrat for -- from maryland, he will take folks to the white house and see if we can get to the bottom of it but obviously the president wasn't briefed and that is bearing out today. >> dan: emily, your thoughts. >> emily: ic two issues. one is whether the president was briefed or not and the credibility of single source reporting. there's a difference between full and intelligence products and singular operational intelligence and single force reporting and if something is put in front of the president or the nsa, it's a finished intelligence product. that means there were thousands of analytical manpower and exhaustive horsepower put into that thing before it rose to that level. singular operational or single source reports always raise verification and credibility questions, including what tina points out, who or what might
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benefit from agitation. to capris point, i think we have to acknowledge as americans that trump does have a bit of sensitivity with especially russian intelligence on the intelligence community. perhaps he wasn't briefed if they thought he won't believe us anyway or will wait and there's further verification. as dana pointed out, those things can be true at one time. >> dan: president trump making a big prediction about the 2020 race. we'll tell you what it is next. .
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♪ >> capri: president trump predicting a big win in november. he says the vast silent majority of supporters will put them over the top despite legging poll numbers. could trump soon be retiring
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this nickname? >> you know who has lost it? sleepy joe has lost it. sleepy joe biden. sleepy joe biden. sleepy joe can't do it. china would like to see sleepy joe biden. >> capri: the trump campaign reportedly ready to get rid of sleepy in favor of a harder hitting nickname to attack biden. i've always said i'm not a big fan of nicknames. i think we are above this, particularly the president of the united states. i think it's pretty childish. as my lifelong republican grandmother used to say, it's gauche. what we are going to do is go around the room and see what you would suggest if you were in the trump campaign. what would you suggest to them? i will start with you, jesse. i think you're going to have something good. >> jesse: i would go with stupid joe. stupidity really encompasses everything that you are trying
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to get across. sleepy. that's obviously an energy iss issue. stupidity encapsulates everything. decision-making. bad instincts. his record and voting in his brain, language. everything under the stupidity umbrella. i would go with stupid joe if we are seriously doing this right now. >> capri: i am immediately regretting doing this but we are going to do it real quick. dana, i hope you're going to be nicer. >> dana: well, i'm not going to do it. nice try. i've never liked the nicknames either. that's president trump's thing and if he thinks he needs to figure out a different way to define joe biden, he may be right. joe biden has benefited from the new cycle, being that the president is dealing with multiple crises at once. health, racial strife, economic problems. stemming just from the pandemic, trying to figure out a way to
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run an election in an election year where i have to figure out how to flip states and everything looks great in february. the campaign, the more they can spend some resources to help define joe biden in whatever way they're going to decide, but i would say the other day when they are airing this out in the press on background, one of the things they say is that they want to say that joe biden was too tough on crime when it came to the crime bill. but now he's too beholden to the left and not tough enough on crime. you have to make a decision and drive forward. >> capri: let's stick o on this, dana. you brought up some really good points. so much as happened between the pandemic and obviously the national conversation on race. we haven't seen a whole lot of joe biden out there on the campaign trail just by virtue of the fact that there is a limitation on what a lot of people can do. emily, do you think it's a good strategy or a bad strategy for joe biden at being out there is
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maybe as much as donald trump is on the campaign trail. >> emily: it would behoove the biden campaign to create a more substantive strategy for him moving forward especially in these final months before the election. i think that these slump in the polls, they are real but i think they're being overblown for the trump campaign and i think the summer before elections is often sort of filled with the hand-wringing and consternation of the donor class and the establishment. they are second-guessing their nominee but it doesn't mean that his camp doesn't have real work in front of them. i think it would be really great if they give american something to vote for rather than just the name-calling coming, something to vote against. i noted that in the itemization of trump donors they are pretty much even across the board and that significant because it means all the different types of people are donating, not just those who are maxed out and it will probably bode well for these months moving forward. >> capri: right.
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we started this segment talking about the silent majority. trump talked about the silent majority four years ago. signs saying that that silent majority stands with trump and we are seeing poll numbers, state-by-state which is important, not necessarily the national polls but look at wisconsin, michigan, pennsylvania where the real clear politics average of polls in these very important electoral college states show biden with a significant lead. my home state of ohio not so much but it is neck and neck, place donald trump won by eight points four years ago and i know what to make of it. ohio is basically within the margin of error and i'm seeing a lot of science and flags for trump but i'm starting to see some biden signs two. dan, final point. you think the silent majority is going to turn it around for donald trump? what do you make of these poll numbers and do you think he can
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pull it out in these very important swing states in the industrial midwest that he was able to win in some places like wisconsin, very narrow margins in 2016. >> dan: you do realize 2016 is playing out all over again? the candidate doesn't visit any of the states and relies on polls showing him ten points ahead. i will leave it there and see what happens. >> capri: there was not a pandemic in 2016 but point well taken. i think we can certainly in ohio remember all of that. the fastest seven is up next. ta-da! did you know liberty mutual customizes your car insurance so you only pay for what you need? i should get a quote. do it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪
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♪ >> emily: welcome back. time for the fastest seven. first up, there's a surprising source of inspiration for baby names this year. the coronavirus pandemic. that's right, the baby named corona has catapulted onto the list of trendy names for girls. i don't know how i feel about naming your baby after something sort of negative it kills people and also a beer. dan, tell me your thoughts. i'll start with you. >> dan: i don't get it. i had my youngest daughter's
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first communion this weekend and they all have masks on and even the group picture was with masks and i thought it's a shame they're going to have to remember the experience like this but who knows. my other daughter's name is isabel that was the year of hurricane isabel in maryland and everyone thought i named her after a hurricane. >> emily: always the coincidence. capri, what do you think? >> capri: no, simple as that. no way. i don't know what people are thinking. wow. >> emily: dana, your thoughts. >> dana: corona also means crown. if you think your daughter is a princess or a queen, that could work. also you bury the lede, one of the other most popular names, jasper. and you're welcome. >> dan: you did that, dana. >> emily: you are ahead of your time, dana. jesse, would you name your next
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baby girl princess, corona? >> jesse: noel. i was thinking maybe something like hydroxychloroquine, a nice name for a baby. doesn't kill people like coronavirus. >> emily: right, he'll be the next elon musk. up next, cash is no longer king thanks to the coronavirus. atm use down 32%. online shopping is surging and consumers racing to get contactless credit and debit cards. i love this because atms were sort of a source of all these germs to begin with so it's positive, right? >> dana: i think so. i think the way that we transact in terms of money is really important. this weekend i was riding my bike in these little kids had a bake sale and i don't have cash with me. nobody is stopping because nobody has any money and they don't have one of those square things. i don't exactly know what's going to happen.
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i read a interesting article last week that because of the pandemic, there's not enough coins circulating. add another problem to the president's list. got to go there and find some quarters and dimes and pennies to get into circulation as well. >> emily: jesse, that's good to know. when your daughters have a lemonade stand, you have to set up venmo for them. >> jesse: ei. if someone has a credit card swipe or selling lemonade, that kid is going places, no doubt. i think this whole story is backwards. i think cash's cleaner. when you are exchanging cash, you have only touched it yourself and then you handed to the guy. if you are putting your card and going with your code into the machine, you are touching those buttons and swiping that machine that everybody else the convenience store has touched. >> dana: jesse, you have to update your phone. you just wave your phone and that's how you pay.
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>> jesse: you just wave your phone? >> dan: i used to investigate counterfeit for a living. here is the con. do you want the g's, the government knowing everything you spend your money on? sorry, not interested. more of a libertarian with that. >> emily: great point. capri, final thoughts. >> capri: i used my contactless card yesterday to get gas. i am part of the cashless crew. >> emily: stay with us. "one more thing" is up next. for people with certain inflammatory conditions. because there are options. like an "unjection™". xeljanz. the first and only pill of its kind that treats moderate to severe rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, or moderate to severe ulcerative colitis when other medicines have not helped enough. xeljanz can lower your ability to fight infections.
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before and during treatment, your doctor should check for infections, like tb and do blood tests. tell your doctor if you've had hepatitis b or c, have flu-like symptoms, or are prone to infections. serious, sometimes fatal infections, cancers including lymphoma, and blood clots have happened. taking a higher than recommended dose of xeljanz for ra may increase risk of death. tears in the stomach or intestines and serious allergic reactions have happened. needles. fine for some. but for you, there's a pill that may provide symptom relief. ask your doctor about the pill first prescribed for ra more than seven years ago. xeljanz. an "unjection™".
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♪ >> jesse: time for "one more thing." there is a guy. he leaves the house and comes home. it looks like there was a break-in because his pots are all over, shattered.
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look what happened. >> what did you do? what did you do? what did you do? >> emily: o. [laughs] poor guy. >> jesse: got his head stuck in the pot. guilty. i don't think jasper would ever do that. he would probably do it and then he would be smart enough to take his head out of it. >> dana: jesse, i don't know if the producers did this on purpose but my one more thing follows yours nicely although i don't have a graphic. i want to show you the family here and they were fishing and they noticed that a bear had a plastic barrels stuck on its head and so they were worried about it but they helped him. it was a cheese ball container, people. it was stuck around his head. the family got the barrel off his head and there he goes.
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off he swims. thank you to that family in wisconsin. >> jesse: dan. >> dan: i would like to thank the fox family for the opportunity to do this. the other week i was guest hosting on "the five." before the show, i lost my uncle. he didn't live his life in front of a camera them a lot -- like a lot of us but he was a far better man than me. he was a plumber and he lived in new york city, he made the city better for the rest of us. we lost him too soon. he used to watch me on tv according to his wife and his daughter, saying that that's my nephew. that's my uncle and now you all know him. he was a real hero. >> emily: sorry. >> dan: thank you. >> jesse: emily compagno.
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>> emily: dan, so sorry for your loss. that was a moving tribute. my video sort of follows chassis. a lot of us have siblings. it's good if you do something wrong to your brother that you apologize. take a look at this dog, watson, saying sorry to his brother. >> what do we say? when we steal someone else's chewy? what do we say? do you know? yes, we say we are sorry. >> dana: [laughs] >> emily: so cute. that's how you do it. a good hug. >> jesse: very cute. finish it up, capri. >> capri: all right, i'm so excited to announce the release of my first cookbook. it's coming out this saturday july 4th. you're going to recognize some of the names in the book. not only my behind it but it's about bringing food together. you're going to see mike huckabee and donna brazile, you're going to want to go to
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united we eat.com and at the end of it, you can preorder your book. >> emily: that's great, capri. congratulations. >> emily: i am so excited. united we eat.com. >> jesse: that site for us. "special report" is next. >> bret: welcome to washington. i am bret baier. fox news has confirmed there were multiple national security council meetings at the white house to discuss the quote menu of responses to russian actions in afghanistan including bounties to harm u.s. troops. that information was based on several streams of intelligence we are told, some of it contradictory. white house officials say president trump was not previously briefed because the information had not been verified and there is no consensus within the intelligence community. correspondent kristin fisher starts us off tonight from the north one of the white house. good evening. >> good evening. our colleague at the pentagon, jennifer griffin, has

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