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tv   Bill Hemmer Reports  FOX News  July 6, 2020 12:00pm-1:00pm PDT

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attribute like that like you just said it. what an amazing man. i think you so much john rich and thank you everyone for joining us. i will see you on "the five. in the meantime, ills here is bill hemmer. >> bill: dana, thank you. i'm bill hemmer, i hope you had a great worth of july over the weekend. confirmed cases of the coronavirus on the rise now at 41 out of 50 states. experts say crowded beaches and parties over the holiday weekend could only fueled outbreak higher. more than 130,000 people have now died in the u.s. from covid-19 and confirmed cases are approaching 3 million. today in new york they reentered shut down. restaurants and gems on short-term rentals closing down again. earlier today from the white house, the press secretary kayleigh mcenany
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talked about the president's upcoming rally in new hampshire, saying they will hand out mass and recommend that people wire them. if more on that in a moment. rnc chairman ronna mcdaniel joins me 120 days out today. we begin in atlanta with jonathan serrie with a look at what's happening today. >> we crunched the latest numbers and what we found was in the past month the seven day average increased 134% while deaths during that same time. decreased 39%. what does this mean? expert same much of this is because fatalities can lag after a week but also patients getting infected in this new resurgence of the virus tended to be younger and some good news the doctors are improving their ability. the florida set a record for new cases, 11,458 over the fourth of july holiday and the
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city of miami beach close to shore line to discourage crowds in the mirror of neighboring miami-dade county is ordering the closure. texas which closed bars as a precaution reported its highest state increase with 8,258 cases in a single day. the epicenter of the outbreak is trying to maintain its downward numbers as it enters phase three reopening today. >> the indoor dining became a real nexus for infection. in a way that other types of economic activity warrant. >> over the weekend the world health organization announced its discouraging potential with drugs for treatment of covid-19 in hospitalized patients.
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interim results showed little to no impact on mortality and actually raised some additional safety issues. >> bill: nice to see us starting our hour today. thank you. we know trump campaign is now announcing the president's next rally would be on saturday in portsmouth new hampshire. very significant and a recent poll showing president trump trailing to joe biden. biden finished in fifth five states. the rally will be outdoors after the official so there will be ample hand sanitizer and they are encouraging people to wear face masks. ronna mcdaniel, what did you learn after the tulsa rally? >> i think the whole country is recognizing that we can continue to gather but do it in a safe way.
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the trump campaign is going to lead the way by having masks, by having son having sensitization, but making sure that it's outdoors. we are going to put people in a safe position but also show that we can gather and support the president and continue to campaign in the times of covid. >> bill: at the mass recommendation is an about face. how did the campaign arrive at that decision? >> there were mass available and i think people are making more informed decisions and they are going to wear the masks and they are being strongly encouraged to do so by the campaign. there were masks given out in tulsa. i promise you, people were throwing them away but i think people were taking them more seriously now. the reality is the president with his leadership put us in a place where no american has gone
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without a ventilator and icu beds are still not full. we were able to flatten the curve which was the initial purpose for shutting down the country and now with every opening we can do it in a safe and healthy weight and balance that with getting our economy going and also campaigning. >> bill: a couple more things here, new hampshire democrats with a scathing statement about the rally. trumps response that the crisis has been chaotic resulting in thousands of grand cedars contracting the virus and hundreds of lives lost while causing significant damage to our state's economy. instead of helping our economy safely recovered trumpets for lying in for a political rally that will only highlight the chaos he has caused. your results? >> i'm not surprised to have the democrats attacked the president and democrats who were silent during the thousands and thousands of protest that we saw across the country, where thousands of people were gathered without masks and
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without social distancing, being led by democratic governors and democrat mayors have now led to a lot of violence continued to happen across the country. it's sad to me that we are not hearing democrats talk about the seven children who were killed this past weekend, most of them african-american. we are not caring about things that are happening across the country as the violence continues to spiral out of control and the president is leading the way saying, enough is enough. we can't continue to have this unrest and that's why it's important that he gets on the campaign trail and shares that message. >> bill: who will talk to ken cuccinelli about the federal response. joe biden tweeted over the weekend to come up late last night he said we will be donald trump and when we do, we won't just rebuild this nation, we will transform it. not a lot of detail on that last phrase but what does transforming to you? >> i think it's frightening. does joe biden want to change the america that has provided so my freedoms and so many opportunities for everyone who
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lives in this country? is he not proud of the nation he wants to lead? i think he has a lot of answers when he comes out of the basement and takes real questions rather than scripted ones by prepicked journalist who had fed him the answers. it is an interesting statement and during the fourth of july, i think kevin mccarthy said it best. if you want to lead america you should love america and president trump has shown that over and over again. >> bill: i'm sure you saw the headline and i'm sure you read the headlines. gone are the days of forecasting a landslide victory in the president's team is not looking for where trump could win more about how he can lose less. i know you disagree with it. a lot of details that i find very interesting four months out, where do you think this race is today? >> i really take issue with that
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peace and political reporters have not rejected rnc and our political director and i were on the phone about it this weekend. what we are seeing on the ground with the mobilization of our volunteers and the energy we are seeing on the ground absolutely shows an expansion of the map. as well as states like minnesota and nevada, and of far larger than what joe biden is doing right now. >> bill: we appreciate you coming on today and we will speak very soon. thank you. breaking news from earlier, the supreme court ruling anonymously that states can require presidential electors to support their estates popular vote winner. this requires electors to vote for the popular vote winner which they usually always do.
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justice elena kagan wrote in her majority opinion that electors have no grounds for reversing the vote of millions of its citizens but today's decision was a defeat for those who wanted to change the electoral college. 9-nothing. meanwhile breaking news for miami, the mayor about to give an update on the coronavirus cases in that state. they've been on the rise in florida and we will monitor that. they close the beaches over the weekend. can't be a great thing over fourth of july weekend. meanwhile, some major u.s. cities seeing a spike in shootings and now president trump is offering help. but how much can the feds actually do? we will talk with ken cuccinelli live in a moment. what then is next for her?
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>> bill: are brittle weekend and the american cities, after a blood he weekend of gun violence across the country. president trump offering help, and in chicago police say nearly 90 people have been shot since thursday. 17 killed and among them, a 7-year-old girl. >> we cannot allow this to be normalized in the city. we cannot get used to hearing about children being gunned down
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in chicago every weekend. >> police said they had one of their most violent weekends in history with at least ten people gunned down in a single day. i will get reaction in a moment from president trump's acting homeland security secretary but for us to matt finn who is covering the story today in chicago. >> yet another deadly and violent fourth of july holiday. this time a 7-year-old girl and 14-year-old boy are among the dead, innocent victims. fernando jones was shot and killed on the city southside on the fourth of july and he just graduated from the eighth grade. 7-year-old natalia wallace was shot and killed in the head as she played with her siblings outside. here is her father. >> to see my daughter on the table with a gunshot wound to the forehead, it hurts me that my youngest daughter is no
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longer here. that i will not be able to talk to her or hold her or tell her anything, bedtime stories or anything. >> today, chicago's police superintendent david brown is insisting the city's home monitoring system has got to be overhauled and also publicly criticizing the people who he calls the decision makers for giving violent offenders light sentences. brown says his officers made 98 gun arrests over the weekend and recovered a 173 illegal guns. >> every gun recovered as a potential deadly force encounter between our officers and the person who has possession of that gun. the frustration is there are no consequences to illegal gun possession. >> the white house says the president views this violent crime as unacceptable.
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it's time for "governors and mayors to step it up. >> bill: i want to bring in ken cuccinelli, sir, thank you for your time today. another brutal weekend and we talked about this last week, just trying to forecast how many people we would be talking about dead in chicago this weekend. what can the federal government do however? >> it depends on what chicago is willing to partner us up on. you know, chicago is one of those cities, and looking for ways to partner up with homeland security and primary supporters across the country. we are also of course dealing with the riots and those hiding behind legal protesters across the country and we are advancing our law enforcement officers all over the country.
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it's those disputes i think that are leading mayors in chicago to shy away from partnering with the federal government. we picked a side here, and those are committing violence in their own communities. this is a piece or not having peace on the streets in which people in america live. the president has been very forceful in pushing these mayors and their governors to start being more aggressive because what we have seen is where we advance responsible forces, police forces, that the violence recedes. there are people there to protect the law-abiding citizens of those communities. fighting crime is local, as a local issue. i understand the president wants to help. but you want to rely on local
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leaders and local law enforcement to act on your own communities. >> that is absolutely true. they are the first line of defense of the state is the second. you have a communitarian disaster like you described this weekend in chicago and you could go around the horn. the federal government isn't supposed to have to show up they just won't push forward. instead of the side of the victims, and the president is pushing and pushing. we can partner up with local officials. >> bill: that's not entirely true and we will give you one example. the mayor and atlanta. she's very forceful in that
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issue with the young woman who was killed in the car with her mom. >> you can't blame this on a police officer, you can't say this is about criminal justice reform. this is about some people carrying some weapons who shot up a car with an 8-year-old baby in the car. for what? >> bill: that was a very heartfelt reaction in a very human way. i guess one thing we could do, you could get more relationships between the officers and those living in the communities. how do we put that back togeth together. there's been engagement between police and communities and it does work better than not having those relationships. but you also heard a mirror blaming the guns. but let's listen to your report.
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you talked about chicago coming across 173 illegal guns. illegal. they weren't law-abiding citizens and he's complaining that he's not getting sentences, and the federal system it's mandatory minimum prison sentence measured in years. years. and if illinois and chicago want to get on the bandwagon to stop that kind of gun violence, illegal gun violence, not by law-abiding gun owners, then it is a cycle that continues. i saw this in virginia and we had this experience in richmond, it can be fixed. >> bill: thank you for your time today. thank you from the white house. >> you bet. >> bill: earlier today, harvard university making some decision about how they will
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>> bill: all classes at harvard university will be online at next school year and, some students will be allowed to live on campus but they will attend classes remotely. i want to bring in the director of the harvard global health institute. and good news out of cambridge. is this the shape of things to come for millions of american students when they go back in the fall if they go back at all? >> thanks for having me on.
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this is what we will see him more and more cases and that's one thing for colleges and universities. i'm really worried about what will happen with primary and secondary schools across country because we really do have to get the kids back to school. >> the age profile is younger, and as it moves and affects younger people they tend to be healthier. what is your feeling about that level of data that is coming to you today? >> if you look at college age kids there are about the lowest risk group there is. one is occasionally some of them do end up getting very sick, and, you need professors and staff and all sorts of other folks who make the university
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run, you have to think about the health of those people as well. so if they don't feel comfortable teaching or working in the university because of worries about large outbreaks, the kids might be okay but it will be hard to run the place. >> bill: at the other side of that is kids staying home even longer. then the mental health aspects that impact so many young children, they are trying to understand what's going on out there. what's your view on that? >> to me, it's like i hate both of these choices. i don't like large outbreaks in schools, because then parents can't work effectively. we have a huge effect on our entire economy. the singlbiggest things we can s suppress the level of virus that we have in the community so we can open up schools and colleges and universities safely. if we don't, we are headed towards fall and winter where we
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will be stuck at home and it will be terrible for children. >> bill: i know you are positive over the weekend, watching a few interviews about a vaccine and you believe it's coming. however in the state of new york, the positivity results are now at 1%. that's amazing. back in late march those same numbers were at 71%. that's a big difference. what that tells me is we can manage this carefully, collectively, in a way that is effective and may not prevent millions and millions of kids missing school this fall. >> from your mouth to god's ears as they say, i think you are absolutely right and it's completely doable. here's the bottom line. new york has done it, they were in horrible shape. they stayed shut down for a long time and they have massively
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wrapped up testing and tracing. so that's how you do it. if we wanted, let's say as a country today we said we will get the kids back to school this fall no matter what, i believe we need to get people wearing masks when they are in public, they need to ramp up testing and they need to make some decisions. may be no indoor bars or nightclubs, we will live without those and bring the virus levels down. if we do then we could have kids in school. not just kids in school but the parents. >> bill: we will see where we are in a couple of days. president trump defending american history with what he calls angry mobs over the holiday weekend. my next guest says we have become a nation of victims. former congressman allen west will explain his position. plus, the president says it's a sign of strength but the washington redskins are facing
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>> president trump: make no mistake, this left wing cultural revolution is designed to overthrow the american revolution. and so in doing so they destroyed the very realization that rescued millions from poverty, disease, violence and hunger. if you believe in justice, if you believe in freedom, if you believe in peace, then you must cherish the principles of our founding. >> president trump calling on americans to live up to the principles of our founding fathers as you just heard while defending our history. he also warned against cancel culture. and angry mobs. let's bring in lieutenant colonel allen west who is serving the u.s. army for 22
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years. thank you as i always say for your service. what did you think of the message over the weekend? >> when i think about the message over the weekend i reflect back on my own life, i wrote about that and come up to many of us are running around looking at, we are offended or we are upset or we are victims and we are not celebrating the great triumphs of america. in 1971 i was born in a blacks only hospital. i grew up in the old neighborhood that produced the rights movement. my father was born in 1920 down in south georgia where in south alabama, my mom was born in 1941. my dad fought for this great nation at a time when it did not provide him with the rights and privileges as it did for others. he fought against italian fascism, and from that man who was just a corporal in the united states army that served
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in the segregated army, he raised a son who became an inference he and front in infantry man and now he has a grandson that was just selected. i think that's what we should be talking about, the things that make us unique, and the quality of what makes us unique and not this cancel culture who's going out and destroying the statue of frederick douglass. >> bill: they ripped frederick douglass off the base and does it make you wonder if they know what they are after? what does that tell you? >> once upon a time we did teach history and the ideological agendas probably in the day. but you think about, you tore down the statue of a man who was
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once a who became one of the great political influencers and figures and advisor to the president abraham lincoln. the reason why we had the emancipation proclamation, or the 54th massachusetts regiment, that tells me that we have a generation, this cancel culture generation which is ignorant of our own history and they are going out and pursuing a goal and objective that they don't really understand. >> bill: frederick douglass, if i could explain that one. he mentioned foxnews.com, and here's what you write. july 4th is special for me. make your case. >> my case is very simple.
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my ideological mentor is a man by the name of booker t. washington. both of these men you grew up in hard times in the united states of america. but look what they were able to accomplish? i would challenge each and every person who is listening to your program right now to read the autobiography of a walk booker t. washington. he was a man that became one of the greatest educators, and because he founded the tuskegee international institute, guess what came from there? tuskegee airmen. and an institution now, tuskegee university. it stands for today. when we start to see ourselves as citizens and what we can do to be part of this incredible american's dream, and not victims. >> bill: last point here on cancel culture. where does it end? >> it never ends because you cannot appease the mob. you can't compromise with them
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and you can't come to any rational solution. at the same as the kid throwing a tantrum in the grocery store aisle. if you give them the froot loops they will continue to throw a tantrum and ask for more froot loops. at some point in time we to have united stateof adults that talkt this means. americans will read the declaration of independence to understand the beauty of this nation. we are not perfect but there is no greater union, no greater hope for mankind as abraham lincoln said that would allow for black was born in that only hospital be speaking to you right now. steve linick do you think it's because of you or because of your parents or something else? >> without a doubt. you were talking to ken cuccinelli and i started out talking about, i had a mother and father and a home. when you decimate the traditional nuclear family, no
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other federal government can come in and no program can come in and replace what was destroyed and that is strong family, strong communities and strong faith and belief. the quality of opportunity and not the community of outcomes. >> bill: and thank you sir. i read the declaration over the weekend and you are exactly right about that. it's amazing the things that have come back and you think about what was relevant net then and relevant today. thanks for sharing your story today. news out of new york, jeffrey epstein's longtime associate and one-time girlfriend ghislaine maxwell transferred to a brooklyn detention center say. she faces multiple charges including women and girls as young as age 14 for epstein to sexually abuse. that's the charge. the british socialite denies any wrongdoing and so the billing
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hearing is expected to be. americans will decide which candidate and what role does that play in that decision in which man has the upper edge? our panel, marc thiessen and robert will for our on for that. ♪ i don't see it. only pay for what you need. ♪ liberty. liberty. liberty. liberty. ♪ i am totally blind. and non-24 can throw my days and nights out of sync, keeping me from the things i love to do. talk to your doctor, and call 844-214-2424.
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vz+s and the hidden smiles. the foggy glasses, and the sore ears. the determined looks, and the muffled laughs. a simple piece of fabric makes a big statement: i care.
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let's all do our part to slow the spread. wear a mask. learn more at covid19.ca.gov. ♪ ♪ >> bill: that's charlie daniels rocking a fiddle in his hit song "the devil went down to georgia." the country music in southern rock ledge and died earlier today at the age of 83. an outspoken supporter of the u.s. military, a member of the country music hall of fame and grand ole opry.
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a doctor say daniels died of a stroke. what a life. charlie daniels, dead at the age of 83. the nfl washington redskins facing pressure to change the team name. this has been going on for a while. it seemed to pick up steam over the weekend. i want to bring in our panel robert wolf, mark t send white house speechwriter that they are both fox news contributor's. good day to both of you. the redskins are under pressure in the cleveland indians are under pressure. there are some wanted to cancel hamilton. >> let's start with the redskins, this is not being done on behalf of native americans. "washington post" poll in 2016 who said that 90% of native americans don't find the name of name skins offended and 80% of nonnative american called them a red skin, they would be
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offended. so it's being done on the same behalf of the woke mob that is tearing down statues and tearing down monuments and threatening corporate america with basically economic sanctions if they don't give into wokeness. i just watched hamilton with my kids, and i told them, that was made in 2016. it could not be made today. they've already started, cancel hamilton is? >> we've been reading about the redskins name change since the 90s and i believe the time has come, it's long overdue. the new coach wants to change the name at 40% of their ownership wants to change the name. i've seen different statistics of their fans wanting the name change and it's become a distraction. in my opinion it's time to move on and i would say the same to
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the indians. with respect to the statues, and i heard your comment earlier. i would ask everyone to read the book in the shadow of the statue by mitch landro and how he changed what was going on down in new orleans with the statues in different african-american kids were walking by and then i realize this is not what they want to walk by. so i'm glad mississippi made their statement and i'm glad ness nascar made their statement but i think there's a difference between that and frederick thomas or thomas jefferson and hamilton. >> bill: it got a lot of attention over the weekend, too. and you wrote a piece for the washington headline, trumps rhetoric is driving away suburban swing voters and he needs them to win. in the piece you make the following case. there is still time for the president to turn things around, he has one thing going for him.
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the economic recovery is happening much sooner than anyone expected. the reason i bring this up, i study the economy for a living. do you think that we hit the bottom of that or are bouncing off of that? that would have an effect on for months. >> without a doubt. in may we were supposed to lose 8 million jobs but instead we gained 2.7 which is ten times more than an act dumb like any normal recovery. and in june's 20 times the growth. we have now recovered 40% of the jobs that were lost during walked down, and we reach close to a hundred. we will have 20 or 30% economic growth and donald trump be going into the election were riding a wave of good economic news. the problem for donald trump is there are millions of americans
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out there for whom it is in their economic interest to vote for donald trump. polls show that they trust obama on the economy. but he has to give those voters permission to vote in their economic self-interest, and he's not doing that right now. >> so robert, he studied the issue very well. the recovery is happening a lot sooner than anyone expected and that bodes well for the man in the white house. >> and just the clarity, yes. we peaked in april of that. and we came back in may and june but we still have more than 20 million unemployed, discouraged and underemployed. we still have an on employment rate higher than the worst peak in the great recession. we still have wages, we still
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have small businesses closing and the most important thing, this number ended june 15th. we know that things are peachy to drastically of florida. we even know what a reopening means. so i would just say, yes. i'm glad the numbers go until june 15 and i hope we have a great july, august and september but i would tell you the numbers and not showing that. we have not had a v-shaped recovery, that's just not facts. >> bill: mark, is that the way that the recovery gets knocked off its current track? >> first of all i don't think we will go back to alecto like the one we saw under any circumstances but, we can't, and the american people won't do it, simply put. people will come up with all the economists who think we are going to have 20 or 30% economic
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growth and third quarter and we will continue to rise. the problem for the democrats, it was similar to what robert just said it, don't celebrate, don't spike the football yet. we've been through racial riots in the first pandemic since 1983, worse demonstrated. biden is saying don't celebrate, but we want to celebrate and we will keep it going. >> i would say don't spike the football. you have 11 million people still unemployed. you have a 1.4 million jobless claims last week. which is a multiple of historic numbers. >> but it's moving in the right direction. it will take a little while to get those people back employed but we could have a hundred percent of those deaths are covered by fall >> yes. this is the same thing -- gdp. >> bill: thank you robert and
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thank you marc thiessen, we'll see you guys next week. in a moment, what have been in iran over the weekend, just our end that may have set the program back significantly. dan hoffman will explain, next. so they can keep more cash in your pockets for when it matters most find out more at usaa.com
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simple. done. we adapt and we change. you know, you just figure it out. we've just been finding a way to keep on pushing. ♪ >> bill: from the middle east, the announcement of launching a new spy satellite had been around a clear side damage will set its nuclear program back for months. former cia chief. good afternoon to you. what happen at this nuclear facility this weekend? >> we are still waiting for details. but we know is that there was a very serious fire that seriously damage the facility where iran was building centrifuges. two years ago, iran proudly
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displayed three models of those centrifuges for the world to see. they were trying to blackmail us into the flawed nuclear deal and demand that we eliminate all those sanctions we placed on iran. >> bill: okay, they blame israel. israel has denied it. let's see how that part of the story plays out. what do we think is the effect of this enormous fire on the overall nuclear ambitions of tehran? >> first of all, there has been three of these explosions in the past week. so i would say it is unlikely that it was human error. it is fair to speculate that it was israel. the only one country with a capability to surveilled at target and surveilled that sort of attack. it was designed to put iranians programs back. iran has tripled its storage. enriching uranium to high grade levels. there are two ways to eliminate
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their nuclear program. one is to negotiated and one is to strike it kinetically. whether it is attributable or not attributable. they wilsources on the ground. >> bill: asked question, dan. president trump says iran will not be nuclear on his watch. will that be happening or not? >> i think that the maximum pressure campaign is really put the hurt on iran's economy which is in free fall. when you have these attacks against iran's nuclear program, the idea is to induce them to get back into the negotiation table. they are facing a lot of trouble right now including domestic protests that were quite serious before the coronavirus pandemic. and this just drives up the pressure on iran. >> bill: thank you for your analysis. nice to see you today. thank you for being here.
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markets are on a tear today. do they see something that may portend good news on this virus? these are the rumors going around. have a good monday everybody. we will see you again tomorrow on tuesday. >> we are shooting each other up on our streets. shot and killed a baby. it wasn't one shooter, there were at least two shooters. an 8-year-old baby. >> neil: imagine those affected by the shootings in cities like atlanta might like new york city, like chicago, like so many others across the country where we had more than two dozen people, most of them children. one as young as eight years old in atlanta. pardon them if they are not too keen looking at looking at the corner of and broad. that's just money. these

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