tv The Five FOX News July 28, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PDT
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more to encourage hiring and all the rest and more jobs assured in this country, there is a price tag that comes with that, joe biden didn't discuss it. perhaps the president will. that is coming up. here comes "the five." ♪ >> hello, everybody. we are moments away from a very busy hour of breaking news, president trump set to hold a news conference at the white house. we'll have that for you live but first, tensions high over on capitol hill today, attorney general bill barr clashing with house democrats repeatedly over the response to violent protests in some of america's cities, democrats saying barr and the trump administration are playing
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politics by sending federal agents to stop the unrest in places like portland. >> the president wants footage for his campaign ads and you appear to be serving it up to him as ordered. in most of these cities, the protests have begun to wind down before you marched in and confronted the protesters and the protesters aren't mobs, they are mothers and veterans and mayors. >> we fought for a democracy for the right to speak freely and you are attempting to take that away, what's worse you're doing it for the sole purpose of furthering the presidenta political agenda and generating campaign for commercials. >> barr fired back. >> a federal court. is that ok? is that ok now? no, the u.s. marshals have a duty to stop that and defend the courthouse and that's what we are doing in portland. we are at the courthouse defending the courthouse. we're not out looking for trouble.
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>> and, of course, partisan politics were on full tis play. there were plenty of moments where democrats kept talking over the attorney general. take a look. >> i gave instructions as to what -- >> >> reclaiming my time. >> you've got to let him answer. >> reclaiming my time. >> the effort was -- >> mr. barr, let me tell you -- i'm starting to lose my temper. >> we are not taking down public health orders, we were making narrow -- >> reclaiming my time. will you restore my time? this witnesses taking my time. >> you were over your time. >> we have dana back here and let's go to greg gutfeld. greg, what did you think about today's hearing? >> first of all, after that -- that was the worst thing i have ever seen on tv and i include "morning joe." after that fiasco, we have to reclaim our time for america. have you ever heard of a more infantile loser defense?
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in the hearing that you could ask a question then cut the answer off with "i'm reclaiming my time"? it creates a one-way street in which you could accuse somebody of murder, you could accuse 24e78 of treason and then you deny them the opportunity to defend themselves, meanwhile this is the party of compassion? i saw nothing but farbists. these guys -- no wonder they think the mob in portland and seattle is not a bad thing. the mob is just their street team. by the way, they keep using this whole -- this idiotic excuse -- the majority of protesters are peaceful. bad tings do not become exempt in small amounts. the majority of americans aren't serial killers but you don't need a majority of serial killers to create a crime wave. let's lose this bait and switch. when we send the police in to deal with violent criminals we're not going after the
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peaceful. this was a contest between who can ask the dumbest question and for their premise to hold they have to deny the reality of violence that 60 days of violence, three police officers permanently blinded and bill barr has to sit there like a calm gorilla swatting these stupid flies off his nose calmly because they're so stupid -- i've got to ask. how could anybody in america put up with this? if i was sitting where barr was i don't know what i would do. they have to put me full of xanax or put me in a cage like "silence of the lambs" because i would lose my mind. i have never seen anything more disgusting on tv. i thought the kavanaugh hearing was an injustice. this is pretty close. >> we're going to cut greg gutfeld off the attorney general list because he would never be able to cut it.
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dana, take the reins. >> dana: sorry about that. i will give you back your time since i was frozen there. katie, one thing i noticed is the democrats have been asking bill barr to come and testify for months and they finally get this date and he gets there. unfortunately, chairman nadler was in a car accident this morning. the hearing started 45 minutes late. understandable. but even -- not only to greg's point did they not let him answer, they didn't even allow him to have a break to get a bite to eat and he was so calm during all of that. >> what happened today was really a disgrace, dana and the spokesperson for d.o.j. tweeted after it was over and said "i'm reclaiming this day" and i think anybody watching felt the same exact way. the democrats made a clear choice today. they not only didn't condemn the violence but they defended it. there was no condemnation of anything that was going on, when bill barr was asked do you think the federal courthouse would be
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standing today if federal law enforcement weren't brought in for back-up to defend the properties and the agents inside and he said "i don't think it would be standing." he was asked if maybe the mob wants to come up to the capitol building and decide they're going to attack that with fireworks, do you believe the democrats in the body would be willing to defend the capitol and bill barr said "with this body i'm not sure" with their behavior of cutting him off and not allowing him to answer questions about serious issues shows this is just an extension of the impeachment trial in terms of their behavior and they can't move forward, and while they accuse bill barr of being political, they were all very political today in trying to put the administration on trial again and attacking every single aspect of what they're doing without allowing him to explain anything, and he is much smarter, greg is right -- this was so -- it was really
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difficult to watch. >> dana: a hearing like this when you have an election year and you have tensions rising high, you can almost bet, jesse, you could see a direct line from the hearing questions today probably from both sides to their fund-raising appeals back home to their campaign donors but i don't think biden is on the same page as the rest of these folks. the former vice president took questions today and we're going to talk about that in the b block but he was asked about the violence and the protests and what happened. >> i do think we need to hold those who violate the law accountable. you should never let what's done in a march for equal rights overcome what the reason for the march is. and that's what these folks are doing. and they should be arrested -- found, arrested and tried.
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>> dana: jesse. >> that was too little too late and i think everybody fell asleep during that answer because it wasn't forceful enough and he just slid that in there and condemned donald trump for the rest of it. all you need to say if you're a democrat is can we not light fires to federal buildings? it's not that hard to do but for some reason the democrats can't bring themselves to do that. it's like if donald trump is against people setting fires to a federal courthouse they all of a sudden have to be for it. i just think it's terrible politics. this was not a hearing. this was a chancealation. they just wanted to cancel bill barr. they were not interested in hearing or listening to anything he had to say because they know he's armed with facts. he's calm, cool and collected and they're just angry. they're furious. they look unprofessional. they're screaming at him. it's kind of bad energy tied up from him turning the tables with
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the russia hoax and him defending donald trump because donald trump, love him or hate him, he's still acting within the boundaries of executive power, and he is not the wing man of the president as eric holder said he was with barack obama. he's upholding the rule of law. really that's the problem with the democrats. they do not want the rule of law upheld. if it was up to them and you can see by their actions they would be ok with antifa burning down courthouses, they're ok with violent protesters attacking police, they won't condemn it, when you show the video at the top as jim jordan did showing the violence against federal property they didn't want to discuss that. it was like the first time they had ever seen it, and it's sad and i think if you're watching this and you are a democrat or you're antifa, you felt like you have been given license to riot because they're not policing
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their own. they don't like police and the irony of gerry nadler denying someone else lunch -- not cool. not cool, gerry. >> dana: juan, let's get your take on how do you think today's hearing went. juan again, i thought it was pretty -- >> again, i thought it was boring because it was foreseen. everybody knew positions beforehand. i don't think there is much arguing, dana, that the justice department under bill barr is extremely, extremely politicized. it was in february that a thousand former justice department officials called on him to resign over his handling of the roger stone case and then in may, 2,000 former justice department officials called on him to resignorf his handling of the michael flynn case -- resign over his handling of the michael flynn case so what you get is
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jeff sessions, nobody's liberals, jeff sessions would not do and i'm talking with getting rid of the u.s. attorney in manhattan who is looking in to rudy giuliani, trump's confidant, i'm talking about assigning somebody, john durham to look into the origins of the trump probe under barack obama as if there is some crime there. i mean, i think that what bill barr has done and i think that's what you are seeing today is mr. barr, you have undermined public trust and equal-handed application of the law in this country and we are a country of laws and this is damaging, and i think that's the big message. >> dana: all right. lots of people can watch a hearing and have different takeaways from it. we'll keep talking about this. the president has a press conference coming up. we'll take that as soon as it occurs. we'll tell you about it next.
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>> president trump coming out soon for a news conference. the former v. b. saying he will announce his running mate next week. mr. biden also unveiling the fourth pillar of his economic plan. it focused on social justice and racial economic inequality. he also said this. >> i think i have laid out the most detailed plans on the economy and on issues relating to health care and the rest of any president in modern history. i mean, it's awful detailed -- if i'm elected and this passes i'm going to be good to go down as one of the most progressive presidents in more than history. >> juan: dana, i wonder what you think of that because bernie sanders says much the same. that biden would be one of the most progressive presidents in american history, although some sanders supporters say they don't think biden is liberal enough. >> dana: i have a lot of thoughts.
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i don't know how many we can get out in the time that we have -- wow. every election is about the future. is that what we're supposed to believe, hope and change for obama. that worked out very well for him. joe biden after all this time in washington saying that now he's going to be agent for change but delivering in a way that's so -- i guess weak and it seems feeble and so there is that for the broader audience and then for the progressives one of the things that happened today is a former co-chair of the sanders campaign said that having to vote for biden is like having to eat a bowl of "s-word." >> katie: say it, dana, say it. >> dana: i'm trying -- >> greg: say it being dana, say it. >> dana: i'm trying to be plus. joe biden is constantly having
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to try to shore up that progressive base to say things like he would be the most progressive president ever but i thought you just won a primary because you won't -- you can forgive us for being a little confused. >> juan: the other part of the big news was his announcement that he's going to name his vice presidential pick next week. there was some ker fuffle in washington today that chris -- there was that ker fulf in washington today about chris -- there was some kerfuffle in washington today. >> jesse: i've never seen this little interest in a vice presidential pick. no one cares. no one is talking about it. it's generated this much buzz and the buzz only exists in the beltway. i think he set the wrong expectations when months and months ago he said he was definitely going to pick a woman, so that kind of takes the
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surprise factor out of it, and then he's kind of hinted that he's going to pick a woman of color so that really shrinks the size of the available people to pick. right now there is not a lot of people generating nationally the excitement or the interest of who -- who joe biden's v.p. is going to be. it's the not the michele tafoya -- that >> it's not the michelle obama, it's not elon musk or an outsider, it's cookie-cutter draw it up in the lab this is what's going to get me this percentage of this demographic. it's boring, to be honest with you. >> juan: jesse, i have to interrupt you. the president is coming out for his briefing. >> a tremendous step toward achieving american pharmaceutical independence. very, very big step. a focus of our campaign to bring
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america's critical supply chains and symmetrical manufacturing back to the u. s. a., we have been working on this for a long time. this is a core of our strategy to protect our people from the horrible china virus. should have never happened. should have never been here. they should have stopped it. in the decades before i took office, foreign nations were allowed to freely plunder or factories and loot our industries and take our business out of the united states. millions of jobs were vacuumed out, taken out so easily. our politicians let that happen. and our communities were stripped and shipped in many cases to chine anda and countries all over the world, nearly four years ago we launched a bold effort to revitalize american manufacturing, enact fair trade deals and bring our industries back home where they belonged. when the china virus landed on our shows it became clearer than
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ever before that restoring american manufacturing is a core matter of national security. we must never be reliant on a foreign nation for american's medical or other needs, and that includes many other needs. i just want tow say thatifieser just a-- that pfizer announced a little while that they're combining phase two and phase three trials and the vaccine looks like it's really heading in a positive direction, first time that's happened and they're months ahead of any other trial. there has never been anything like it. it's the factest ever and to me it's very exciting. -- it's the fastest ever and to pea it's very exciting. i'm happy to announce one of the -- my administration has reached a historic agreement with a great american company. you remember this company.
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it's called from the good old camera age, the old days. to begin producing critical pharmaceutical ingredients. it's called kodak. and it's going to be right here in america. i want to congratulate the people in kodak. they have been working very hard. members of my administration are present in rochester right now -- rochester, new york. a good place. and they are trying to finalize this groundbreaking deal and they will be announcing this deal. i want to thank governor andrew cuomo and his representatives. we've worked well together on this deal. it's a great deal for new york and a great deal for kodak. 90% of all prescriptions written in the united states are for generic drugs. we have approved more generic drugs than any other administration by far. generic drugs can be just as good as the brand names but cost much less. less than 10% of the active
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pharmaceutical ingredients needed to make these drugs are currently manufactured in america. more than 50%, however, are made in india and china. and you will be seeing a lot of things happen -- it's been happening but it's happening at a more rapid pace right now. with this new agreement, my administration is using the defense production act to provide a $765 million loan to support the launch of kodak pharmaceuticals. it's a great name when you think of it. such i great name. it was one of the great brands in the world. then people went digital and code beinga didn't follow, but now under very extraordinary leadership are following and they are doing something in a field and they've hired some of the best people in the world to be taking care of that company and watching that company. watching over it. it's a breakthrough in bringing pharmaceutical manufacturing
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back to the united states. under this contract, our 33rd use of the defense production act -- when you were saying i didn't use it enough, i didn't use it enough, and now you heard, it's the 33rd use. we don't talk about it all the time. we used it and we used ita a little bit of a threat frankly with certain countries that weren't doing as we were asking them to do and it came through as both a threat and a usage but this is our 33rd use of the defense production act, kodak will now produce generic active pharmaceutical ingredients. this is a big deal. using advanced manufacturing techniques, kodak will also make the key starting materials that are the building blocks for many drugs in a manner that is both cost competitive and environmentally safe, will be competitive with almost all countries and soon with all countries. once this new division is fully operational, in addition to all the other plants that we have
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opened with other companies throughout the united states recently it will produce as much as 25% of all active ingredients needed to make generic drugs in the u.s.a. it's a big number. 25%. this agreement will directly create 360 new jobs at kodak's factory in rochester. that's just in the initial phase. and in minneapolis. a place i have gotten to know very well and it is a great place and i'm very happy that we're able to help them with the problems that they have had recently. the national guard. i want to thank the national guard. both state and beyond. i want to thank them for the incredible job. they went in and they did some beautiful job. they cleaned it up. you didn't hear about the problems any more. and indirectly, we created thousands more jobs all across our pharmaceutical supply chains. we have now been building a very big pharmaceutical supply chain. not only coming out of china.
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coming out of other countries also. i want to thank peter navarro, adam boller and admiral bolocek for making this possible. today's action is our latest step to build the greatest medical arsenal in history. we'll be able to do that through the defense production act and other authorities. we have invested more than $3 billion in our nation's industrial base. we've contracted companies such as ford, general motors and phillips to produce more than 200,000 ventilators by the end of this more than, more than seven times more than a typical year, contracted with honeywell and increase u.s. production of n-95 masks and we've brought it from less than 40 million a
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month to over 100 million a month by august and we'll have 160 million in a very short while. 160 million a month. that's many times what we use to do. if you go back two years ago, many, many times. we're increasing domestic production of gloves by 1,000%. 1,000%. we'll be manufacturing 450 million gloves annually by next year. we're finalizing contracts with our textile industry to make gowns in america with american fabric which makes a lot of our businesses happy that produce the fabric. we have 13 million reusable gowns in the stockpile and we'll continue to grow that number to 72 million this fall which is a rapid escalation indeed. we made major investments in new, rapid point-of-care tests so we have -- there is nothing like the rapid point where you
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get your answer in five minutes to 15 minutes to maybe 20, 25 minutes at the max and we're already at about a 50% level and we're bringing it up substantially from there. we're growing domestic production from less than 250,0 r000 test kits per month in may to eight million test kits per month, there is nothing like this that has taken place in the world or close. through puritan in the month of maine, great state, we've increased production of test swabs from 30 million a month in june to 56 million. i went to maine. i went to the plant where they do this. it was incredible. a great experience. and will produce over 100 million swabs per month by january. we've dramatically ramped up production of materials needed for a vaccine and are on track to rapidly produce 100 million doses as soon as a vaccine is
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approved which could be very, very soon and 500 million doses shortly thereafter, so we'll have 500 million doses. and logistically we're using our great military -- a group of people their whole life is based around logistics and bringing things to and from locations and they'll be able to care of this locationally and bringing it where it has to go very quickly. they're mobilized. it's been fully set up. a very talented general is in charge and when we have the vaccine it will be discharged and taken care of. it will be a very rapid process all over the country and perhaps we'll be supplying a lot of the vaccine to other parts of the world like we do with ventilators and other things that we all of a sudden have become very good at making. when the china virus struck our nation we mobilizeded the entire government and the private
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sector to acquire, source and deliver life-saving supplies. h. h. s., fema and the private sector combined have coordinated the delivery of more than 196 million n-95 respirators, 815 million surgical masks, 20 million gloves, 34 million face shields and 354 million gowns. that's a lot of gowns. last week fema completed a second shipment of personal protective equipment to over 15,000 nursing homes in the united states. our big focus has been on nursing homes and senior citizens as you know. that's where we want to take care. we have to take care of the most vulnerable. especially if they have a medical difficulty. a medical problem. in particular heart or diabetes. which provided a total of 1.2 million pairs of protective eyewear. 14 million masks. 66 million pairs of gloves.
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and 13 million gowns. we have replenished the long-neglected national stockpile. in january the stockpile had 17.9 million n-95 masks. today the stockpile is over 50 million n-95 masks and we'll be doubling that in a very short period of time and then doubling that number. we've shipped more than 14,000 ventilators to areas of need and 75,000 available to deploy. not a single american who has needed a ventilator has been denied a ventilator and you remember early on when we were first hit with the virus ventilators were very hard to come by, and now we're the largest maker anywhere in the world by far and not only are we fully supplied and stocked but we're helping other nations because ventilators are hard to build and hard to get.
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this is just the beginning. in the coming months we will continue the largest onshoring campaign in history, we will bring back our jobs and we will make america the world's premier medical manufacturer and supplier. it's been happening now for quite some time. we're seeing improvements across the major metro areas and most hot spots. you can look at large portions of our country. it's corona free. but we are watching very carefully. california, arizona, texas and most of florida. starting to head down in the right direction and i think you will see it rapidly head down very soon but if you look, california, arizona, texas and for the most part most of florida starting to head down. in the wake of the recent mass gatherings americans have witnessed in the streets of portland and seattle, we are also tracking a significant rise in cases in both metropolitan areas because of what's been
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going on, and we as you know have done an excellent job of watching over portland and watching our country where they wanted to burn it down. they're anarchists. nothing short of anarchists. agitators. and we have protected it very powerfully. if we didn't go there i will tell you wouldn't have a courthouse. you would have a billion dollar burned-out building. we are also working aggressively it on combat the virus in native american and alaska native american communicates, under the cares act we provided $8 billion to address the coronavirus in tribal communities and we worked very hard with tribal communities very vulnerable to this horrible plague. that's the largest investment in indian country in u.s. history. there has never been an investment that big in indian country. we need every american to help protect our fellow citizens and help prevent the spread of the
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disease. it's critical that younger americans remember that even though they are at lower risk and in fact some are in -- some age groups are in extraordinarily low risk themselves, they can unknowingly spread the virus to others who are at higher risk, i ask all americans regardless of background or age to practice social distancing which people have gotten very used to but we have to keep doing it, remain vigilant about hygiene. avoid indoor gatherings and large gatherings, especially indoor especially where you have crowded bars, and that you wear a mask whenever appropriate. through the genius of our scientists, the devotion of our doctors, the skill of our workers and the dedication of our people we will achieve victory over the virus and emerge stronger than ever before. we're looking at a very powerful year next year economicamy. the jobs numbers are looking outstanding to put it mildly.
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set records. the numbers on retail. retail sales. came in two weeks ago at the highest number in the history of our country. we look like we're heading to some very, very good economic times. that means jobs. that means stock market. stock market is already doing very well. it's getting to a point very close to where it was when we had this -- when we were hit with the plague. i want to thank everybody for being here. steve, please, go ahead. >> can you clarify your acceptance speech for the republican nomination? are you physically going to be in charlotte? or will you give the speech here or somewhere else? >> we'll be doing a speech on thursday -- the main speech. the primary speech. charlotte, they will be doing nominating on monday. that's a different -- that's a different period. a different thing happening. they'll be doing nominations on monday. i speak on thursday. ok? >> from where? >> we'll be announcing it soon. >> you could be going to
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charlotte? >> anybody have any ideas? we'll be announcing it very soon. >> mr. president. >> mr. president. >> the negotiations are ongoing right now for the next relief measures. republicans -- senate republicans have put forth their plan. do you support what senate republicans have put forward? are there certain aspects they put forward that you don't support? >> yeah, there are and we'll be talking about it, there are also things i very much support but we'll be foeshting. it's sort of semi-irrelevant because the democrats come with their needs and asks and the republicans go with theirs so we'll be discussing it with mitch and all the other people involved. kevin has been very active as you know. all the people involved. steve mnuchin has done a very good job. keeps everybody together. both democrat and republican. we'll see. we want to do what's best for the people. i want to do what's best for the people. i want to do what's best for the
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economy because that means jobs and lots of good things. all right? >> what senate republicans put forward? >> mr. president. two questions quickly. first, can you clarify your position on the efficacy of hydroxy chloroquinn after you retreated video make -- hydroxychloroquin after you retreated video -- >> recommendations of many other people including many doctors think it is extremely successful. the hydroxy chlor coupled with the -- the hydroxy chlor quinn. -- the hydroxy. and some some people think it's become political. i took it for a 14-day period. and i'm here. i think it works in the early stages. i think front line medical people believe that too.
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some. many. so we'll take a look at it. the one thing we know. it's been out for a long time, that particular formula and that's essentially what it is, the pill, and it's been for malaria, lupus and other things. it's safe. it doesn't cause problems. i had no problem. i had absolutely no problem. felt no different. didn't feel good, bad or indifferent and i tested -- as you know, it didn't get me and it's not going to -- hopefully hurt anybody, so we know from that standpoint -- because it's been so many years from the safety standpoint it's safe. based on what i have read. i have read a lot about hydroxy. i think it has an impact especially early. there were very good tests at ford and the doctor from yale came up with a very strong testament to it. there was a group of doctors yesterday, a large group put on the internet ask for some reason
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the internet wanted to take them down and took them off -- i guess twitty took them off, facebook took them off, i don't know why, they're very respected doctors, there was a woman who was spectacular in her statements about it and she's had tremendous success with it, and they took her -- they took her off -- i don't know why they took her off but they took her off. maybe they had a good reason. i don't know. i can only say from my standpoint and based on a lot of reading and knowledge about it it could have a lot of positive impact in the early stages and i don't think you lose anything by doing it other than politically it doesn't seem to be too popular. you know why? because i recommended it. when i recommend something, they like to say don't use it. john. >> on that note, mr. president, last night tweets deleted by twitter you said that dr. fauci
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misled the country about hydroxychloroquin. >> not at all. i don't know what his stance is. he was at the task force meeting a while ago. i have a very good relationship with dr. fauci and it's interesting. we've listened to dr. fauci, i haven't always agreed with him which is standard, he did not want us to put up the ban to china and china was heavily infected, wuhan, he didn't want to do that and other things and he told me i was right and he told me i saved 10's of thousands of lives which i think is fact and i did the ban on europe but i get along with him well and i agree with a lot of what he said, so it's interesting. he's got a very good approval rating. i like that. the it's good. remember. he's working for this administration. he's working with us, john. we could have gotten other people. we could have gotten somebody else. it didn't have to be dr. fauci.
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he's working with our administration and for the most part he's done pretty much what he and dr. birx and others who are terrific recommended. he's got this high approval rating. why don't i have a high approval rating with respect -- and the administration? with respect to the virus? we should have a very high -- because what we have done in terms of -- we're just reading off about the masks and the gowns and the ventilators and numbers that nob has seen and the testing at 55 million tests, we tested more than anybody in the world. i have a graph i would love to see you, perhaps you have seen it, we're up here and the rest of the world is down at a level that is just a tiny fraction of what we've done in terms of testing so it's curious. a man works for us, with us, very closely, dr. fauci and dr. birx, very highly thought of and they're highly thought of but nobody likes me. it can only be my personality. that's all. go ahead. >> also, d.h.s. announced it is
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going to undertake a thorough review of the daca program to decide whether to continue it and if not how to -- about daca you were thinking about a path to citizenship for daca recipients. are you still? >> we're working with a lot of people on daca and an administration gil, an american-based system which i have wanted for a long time. that decision was an interesting decision because it gave the president as the president more power than many people thought the president had so the president is now -- which happens to be me -- in a position where i can do an immigration bill and a health care bill and some other bills and you have seen some of them come along. we're going to do tremendous -- we just signed it three days ago -- we're going to do a tremendous prescription drug price reductions. tremendous. it could be over 50%. whether it's favored-nations clauses or anything else, it's tremendous numbers we're talking
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about. you go to some countries and they'll sell like a pill for 10 cents and then the united states it costs two dollars, and it's the same basic factory. it's the same everything. the united states bears the costs of all of these low prices that you see all over the world where people go to canada to buy a prescription drug from the united states. not going to happen with me. it's not going to happen with me. so john, i think one of the exciting things that got very little coverage, that's ok but the people understand it -- i think we will be reducing prescription drug prices by massive amounts. numbers that have never been done before. other thing, in 51 years we got as you know last year drug prices came down. first time in 51 years that they came down. with what i signed last week i think that drug prices can come counsel by numbers like 50% and
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even greater in -- can come down by numbers like 50% and even greater in certain instances. >> are you considering a path to citizenship for daca? >> we're going to make them happy and end upon with a fantastic merit-based immigration system. >> drug pricing you said that pharmaceutical members would be here for a meeting to bring drug prices down. that meeting was cancelled. why? >> i didn't know a meeting was cancelled. >> you said there would be a meeting with drug companies. >> i said there would be a meeting sometime this week. they want to meet. i don't know that it was cancelled. they want to meet. i thought the meeting was actually scheduled for tomorrow. i thought the meeting was schedule tomorrow. sorry about the dates. i see how upset you are by it. bloomberg. mr. bargain. you look like mr. bloomberg.
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-- go ahead. >> supplemental unemployment aid if congress isn't completed by the end of this week. >> we're going to take care of the people. good question. we're going to take care of the people. >> the woman you said was a great doctor in the interview you retweeted last night said that masks don't work and there is a cure for covid-19, experts say it not true, doctors make medicine using d.n.a. from aliens and that they're trying to create a vaccine to make you immune from the coming -- >> maybe it's not but i can tell you this. she was on air along with many other doctors. they were big fans of hydroxychloroquin. and i thought she was very impressive in the sense that from where she came -- i don't know which country she comes from but she says she's had tremendous success with hundreds of different patients and i thought her voice was an important voice but i know nothing about her. >> last week -- last week --
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>> thank you very much, everybody, thank you. >> juan: that was president trump at the white house gives giving an update on the coronavirus and talking about increased supplies of gloves, gowns and even supporting some companies that could provide a vaccine in the future. we're back now with "five." let me ask jesse. let me ask you. the president got into a real discussion there about his relationship with dr. fauci and criticism last night of fauci. what did you make of that? >> i thought it was hilarious, he said i'm the guy tabrought fauci in and he's got this sky high approval rating and i'm
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doing everything pretty much that fauci tells me so the only thing different must be my personality. do we want to get to greg's book? yes. as the only resident reader on the show. plus self help is out today, greg, i have a copy of it here, it's not inscribed with anything nice, it's all just slander and some of the things i can't even say on television but tell me about the book. why you wrote it. and maybe a suggestion for people that might need self-help. >> greg: i thought that i could become a more positive person and if i could become a positive person i would actually write about it because i have absolutely -- i am probably the most cynical, least positive person and i woke up and i
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thought if i could actually reverse this -- as an experiment. this was like a middle of the night thought -- i'm going to do it and i realized it was really a psychological challenge because all of my issues in my life, the things that bother me can be fixed psychologically so the book is about how to deal with i think constant, persistent issues in your life by slightly changing it a little bit. that was my goal. doing a positive book. >> jesse: you said you need to brainwash yourself. i agree you have been brainwashed. not sure if you have been becoming more positive or notment one of the things you said, if you're not getting happier as you're getting older you're doing it wrong, and resist the media's command to expand destructive narratives. >> jesse: dana, have you read the book? did you get an early copy? is this at all what it's cracked up to be? >> dana: it is what it's cracked
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up to be, i got a copy and we'll do a live signing later tonight where we take questions from readers who have bought the book but greg, did you find that there was any certain trick or tip that you could use to go from having a negative thought to a positive thought? >> greg: yeah, i realized that all the negative thoughts come from a sunk cost because i had invested time or effort into something like being in a bad relationship and it's like that's how you are with ideas so you might hold onto an idea for a long time because of the time itself being an investment so realizing that a sunk cost is already gone allows you to let go of a lot of ideas and stuff that's been driving you crazy but the best part is and the thing that i found is the most constructive is that it allows me to admit when i'm wrong about something and i can actually let go of mistakes that i have made much easier than i did before.
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>> jesse: juan. would you agree that greg is admitting when he's wrong a little bit more? >> juan: what caught me attention was greg gave interesting advice. he said don't tweet when you're drunk and i thought has this happened to greg? how does greg know this? >> greg: because it has. here is the problem with tweeting and drinking. it's not that your tweets are bad it's the quantity increases so you create more opportunities for getting in trouble. i wrote about this when the covington kid incident took place that i was tweeting about it -- i would tweet about it once, negatively about the covington team because i was sitting at a restaurant drinking on a is afternoon and i like -- you always think your ideas are so important after two glasses of wine and i -- if i had -- i
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always talk about that. i always eliminate -- i eliminate the alcohol variable and life is a lot better when it comes to tweeting. it's not much better if other areas but in tweeting, it controls that. >> jesse: katie. >> i like the new greg and the more positivity but i would like to know why you called it the plus. >> greg: i would look at every single thing i was doing especially on social media and also like in meetings and ask myself if what i was about to do was going to add anything or take anything away tow is so it became a plus for a minus equation in my head walking around like the terminator with this little thing in my head. is what i'm about to say to my wife plus or minus and it ends up shutting me up. i'm completely silent. although you haven't noticed it here. >> jesse: not at all.
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♪ >> dana: it's time now for "one more thing." breaking news coming across the wires, exclusive footage of greg gutfeld going out on his book tour if we could go to that, please, yes, greg is willing to go to any lengths to get to your book signing. there he is hitching a ride across the lake just to get to the book signing which we are going to do tonight. 7:00 p.m. eastern. 6:00 p.m. central if you go to premier collectibles.com he and i will be together. i'll interview him. you can find that at our
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facebook pages on live and you won't want to miss it because i'm going to find out more about "the plus." a great book indeed. jesse. >> jesse: dana, i'm going to send you suggested questions to ask gutfeld so keep your eyes on your email. "jesse's hair news" is now as you look at it move. friday we asked you if i should get a haircut. a bunch people weighed in. yes, sir, unless you have to start singing. even gutfeld couldn't help himself commenting on instagram. "he should shave his head and paint it half blue." naked wearing a bolo tie and with my half shaven head painted blue. the results are in. 45% say no. 55% say yes. i am going to get a haircut. i'm going to get it tomorrow. i'm just getting the back cut. we're just going to cut the
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mullet. ware going to keep the top long. stay tuned for more hair news. >> dana: stay tuned indeed. juan, what do you have today? >> juan: i think you know "blue bayou" a great song by ray orbison, blue diamond is one of the most expensive gems and blue angels, the navy flight team but do you know about the blue lobster? they exist. the blue lobster existed at red lobster. i'm not joking. a blue lobster at the red lobster in akron, ohio, an aquarium was alerted and they arranged for a new home at the akron zoo. blue lobsters only occur one in only two million. it's a genetic anomaly. i can't tell you hoyou it tastes but it looks cool to me. that's different.
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>> dana: "special report" is next. we have shannon bream. shannon. >> great to see you. thanks, dana. >> good evening and welcome to washington. shannon bream for bret baier. president trump just concluded a news conference from the white house. he said large portions of the country are corona free. ment cases in hot zens are heading down but the briefing was not all about coronavirus. chief white house correspondent john roberts. >> john: some of the biggest news is the fact that the department of homeland security is going to undertake a thorough review of the
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