tv The Five FOX News November 23, 2020 2:00pm-3:00pm PST
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what happened. sam, great catching up with you. sam calls them as he sees them. really quickly, michigan's elections for board has certified a victory for joe biden, yet another setback for team trump. here comes more fox and a 20. musical medical >> dana: hello, everyone, i'm richard tot mike dana perino. it's 5:00 in new york city, this is "the five." musical medical >> dana: growing outrage over new covert restrictions as millions of americans start gearing up for thanksgiving and protesters even taking to the streets in california to find a curfew there. los angeles county and nothing it will suspend in suspend in-person dining and in nevada, the governor is issuing a statewide pause for at least three weeks for a stronger mask mandate and more restrictions. in nashville officials are limiting gatherings to just eight people and in oregon, the
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governor is telling people to call the cops on their neighbors if they violate the rules. >> this is no different than what happens if there's a party down the street and it's keeping everyone away. went to the neighbors do? they call law enforcement because it's too noisy. >> dana: if i could help be on the way? the company astrazeneca announcing its vaccine is up to 90% effective and dr. fauci says the upcoming vaccines can help crush the pandemic. >> help is on the way. traditionally and historically, highly efficacious and effective vaccines have crossed epidemics like smallpox and polio and measles. we can do that with the vaccines that are going to be coming online. >> dana: great news about vaccines and great to have at least three options with more on the way. before you get to that point, jesse, it looks like there will be more of these rules and
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restrictions. i don't think you would ever rat me out or call the cops if i have more than eight people ov over. >> the price is right dana, you never know. if there's a reward system i might pick up the phone. [laughs] there is a silver lining to these restrictions around thanksgiving which is there is more juicy family gossip going around. families are silently judging other family members for how they are behaving during the pandemic. so you have one family that has shuffled the twentysomethings, these people are high-risk. they are out at the beach, they are at bars, you know they are coming in and they will get everybody sick. you don't really want them to come but it's hard to tell them not to come. if they do come you put them at the kids and table, even though they are 26. if anyone does get sick you blame that family member. then there's family but just wants credit for coming. they will jump through all these hoops to get there, they've been quarantining for two weeks, they've got an extensive test on and they want everyone in the family to know that they will stop at nothing to get there.
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and so they want credit. you respect the fact that they get tested but you kind of rolled their eyes at the theatrics. and then there's the family that's looking for an excuse not to show up. these are the people that don't follow guidelines anyway but now all of a sudden they have to follow these guidelines, sir. you are looking for an out, felt she gave you an out and you are taking it. you didn't want to be there in the first place. >> juan: which one are you? >> jesse: i've been there. more or like the uncle or aunt that has the comorbidities, they have these underlying conditions but you don't want to tell them that they have these underlying conditions. like the ant that's chain-smoking, everyone is saying uncle joe probably shouldn't come but no one has the courage to say it to their face. then, there is a liberal family. the liberal family is not going anywhere, you have to go to them. but if you go to them you can't fly, you have to drive.
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you have to get tested, temperature checked before you enter, you have to wear masks and social distance at the table. and if you raise any objections to these three conditions, you are judged as a "super-spreader." >> dana: and you are doing what? >> jesse: what do you think? >> dana: i think it will be the most responsible, a good son, a good dad, you know -- >> jesse: i'm there to watch football. >> dana: [laughs] a lot of these roles are not laws. they are the government saying, this is what we want you to do. but there is no law behind it. >> dagan: and the decisions are arbitrary intercounty in and made by politicians who are plagued with idiocy. i'm going to open my phone and look at it, on wednesday, restaurants and bars are ordered in the state of pennsylvania that they can't sell alcohol after 5:00 p.m. until 8:00 a.m. on thanksgiving day. why is that?
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while you are going to crowd people -- stock up at liquor stores and crowd into people's homes. there's no rhyme or reason. all restaurants and bar owners are waking up to the fact these politicians have zero idea what they are doing and they make it worse because they are so condescending and sanctimonious about those very decisions. out in los angeles in l.a. county, they are shutting down restaurants, the restaurant owners are like, wait a minute. we've installed thousands of dollars of protective equipment and now we can't operate at all? the american people, regular folks, understand how to deal with reward analysis, cost-benefit analysis. they actually know these lockdowns are hurting our livelihoods, our mental health, increasing drug and alcohol abuse and the politicians can't see that. the american people getting on planes, good for you. going to see relatives, the ones that will bring the sea economy
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out of this malaise. not kiss kiss, shame shame. >> dana: then we have andrew cuomo, he's getting an award. he talked about it today. let's listen to him. >> i wish i could say that my daily covid presentations were well choreographed, scripted, rehearsal reflected any of the talents that you advance, they didn't. they offered only one thing. authentic truth and stability. but sometimes, that's enough. >> dana: a very humble, greg. >> greg: i guess that makes chris cuomo the smart one. i had it reversed. before i talk about cuomo, i have to say some people unintentionally revealed are major flaws. governor brown revealed that she has no friends or neighbors because no person would ever tell you to call the police on your neighbors. neighbors never do that, because
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you have to still live there. it's not like you call the police on your neighbors and say there are 17 people at their thanksgiving, and then you just move away. you are there the day after thanksgiving and my god, you will pay. if a neighbor did that to me, you will pay in ways you don't even understand. there are things that i could do to your front lawn that don't go away and they smell so bad. all right, so to cuomo, just to show you that life isn't fair, people think we should always be striving for fairness. it's good but life is never fair. so, you have one man that ushers in the revolutionary moon shot in terms of a vaccine that's never been done before, and that will be a breakthrough that you can map all future vaccines on. he's called evil. right? evil. then you have a man indirectly affecting thousands of people, killing them, and he wins on ending. one gets enmity and one gets on
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me. why is that? because we live in a society that rewards and punishes only words and not deeds. so why did chris cuomo -- andrew cuomo, whatever, when something? it's about his performance. his words. not about what he did because what he did was absolutely horrible. meanwhile he punished trump for what? being obnoxious? his words, but what does he do? he ushered in a brand-new phase of vaccines and change the worlds. world. but those are deeds, and we don't reward deeds, we reward words. there is no fairness in society, it makes me sick to my stomach. we deserve an enemy. this show deserves an enemy. this show is a best on tv and would still don't have an enemy. >> dana: we do deserve an enemy. you are exactly right. >> greg: screw you, enemies. >> dana: you are exactly right. are there some measures that can be taken to keep businesses
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open? >> i think degen is right, there has to be some equilibrium. we are months away from possibly getting over coronavirus, every state has an increasing coronavirus cases, hospitalizations are through the roof and that means we have got to be mindful as americans. we have to be socially distance, follow some of these guidelines as of the surgeon general's at this morning because it's the only way we will ever get to a vaccine. as for cuomo, i'm not sure he should have gotten an enemy, but during his press conference, a lot of americans, that was the only information they were getting. they were getting it from the president who was telling us to drink bleach. >> greg: you are going to have to take that back. he never said -- >> he said maybe you can try bleach or maybe you can use a light. >> greg: if you are going to make an erroneous comment, at least be in the ballpark. >> what do you mean? what did he say, inject bleach.
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>> greg: did he say inject bleach? he didn't. you got that from a reporter. >> he said it in the press briefing, he watched it. so did millions of other americans. >> dana: i'm going to pull it up in the google as soon as we break. >> greg: he was talking about future research and how it would be really good if there was a way to disinfect, you know. >> any time a president is going out and giving conjecture during a press conference, that's inappropriate. >> dagan: along with killing our elderly. >> i'm not denying that. >> dana: we need to kennedy's whistle. georgia is on joe biden's mind, the president-elect is expected to make a stop there. control of the senate hangs in the balance. ♪ good morning, mr. sun.
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♪ >> greg: joe biden going all in on the state of georgia as the state of his legislative agenda hangs in the balance. mr. biden is set to campaign for both the democrats running in pivotal sent elections this january. doug collins was born in what was at stake. >> georgians need to realize the reason outside money is flooding into georgia right now is because they want to fundamentally change the senate. they want to fundamentally take away the powers of ron johnson, lindsey graham and others into things that we know have been happening. >> jesse: but this may not help raphael warnock -- wayne
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which he said, "nobody can serve god in the military." omar calling criticism of his comments a disgrace and shameful. what do you think about the strategy, dana, i've kind of going after omar, going after the squad and kind of bringing them into this georgia senate race? >> dana: i think the republicans at the nrsc, the national republican senatorial committee, they like it when bernie sanders says i'm fully endorsing john allsop, they say i take that and run with it. also you have a lot of celebrities from hollywood parachuting into georgia and nothing helps more. >> jesse: they had actual parachutes. >> dana: it's a pretty big show that they have. let me point out for example in maine, $40 million came in from outside of the state, they challenge susan collins, susan collins ends up winning by ten points on one of the things that people set was outside many irritated them. they don't want maine to change and i don't think georgians want
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georgia to change. the worst thing that the democrats have going for them as i comment that chuck schumer had, first we will change georgia and then we will change america. that's working in the republicans favor though, it's very close. it will be a tight race. >> jesse: i saw a poll today that said the majority want them to maintain control because i like deadlock. >> dagan: and the terms of what they would do to get rid of the filibuster and stuck the supreme court and states of the union so they could also stack the senate, that's not some dream that was cooked up, that's actually been laid out by many people. throwing money around is always the sign of desperation, ask any woman who has been on a date with somebody who is like throwing money out at this big dinner and you walk out and you are driving a bronco two with rusted out floor boards, you know that's not good at, number one. republicans only need to talk about one thing, gun control. say the word, to words, gun
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confiscation. remember that jen o'malley dillon meant she was running beta works campaign was talking about mandatory gun buyback, that's gun confiscation. today you did a segment because i was watching your show about the biden gun tax that's being floated. if you read into that plan come to $200 tax on weapons if you don't turn them in as part of the gun buyback, it looks like the way he was talking about it, it would apply to many firearms of the united states. nobody in georgia and nobody in the south would get on board with that. >> jesse: can you guys stop trying to fundamentally change this country, richard? give it a rest. how much damage can one party do. >> we try our best. if you think about why we are here it's because of two words, stacey abrams. stacey abrams for a very long time believed that georgia could be flipped to a blue state. she and a number of other black women started to organize the
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georgia tech project. as a result there's two senate races. them plus savannah plus columbia georgia will be the determiners in this election, and while republicans have a voter registration advantage, what democrats have in their favor they have momentum. they also have a huge base of atlanta grown celebrities who live in atlanta. tyler peary, carte cardi b, andy will turn up their base. that's why georgia flipped in the first place. >> jesse: if they get both seats, they will not be able to get their jordans. >> richard: they won't be able to afford a third home. it will be trouble, it will destroy the recovery. >> greg: you know, here's the deal. i don't want the democrats to win either of those seats and i think it would help joe biden, because biden needs a bad cop. right? if you have a republican house,
quote
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republican senate -- i mean democratic house, democratic senate and democrat in the white house, he will roll over and it will be like a tank over a twinkie. he's not going to stand up, he will need that bad cop. having said that, and i will get to the real reason. i can't abide by attacking warnock over the phrasing because basically what he did was, traditional, you can't serve two masters boiler plate he didn't just mentioned mention god in the military, it was -- i don't want to say, so anyway. >> richard: i will give you the point. just for clarifying, it's on the book of matthew that he was preaching from on that particular day. >> greg: i'm a little brighter than i look, just barely. but you can't let democrats have total power because they fight asymmetrically. right, you know what i mean?
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when it comes to labeling and banning speech, it's only one direction. they are antifascist unless it's antifa. they are totally me, too, unless it's joe and tara reade. and they are against foreign wars until trump wants to end them. so you can't trust them to be like a fair-minded and all issues because they are so asymmetrical, you have to have the republicans there. >> jesse: that's true. and greg gutfeld has a matching salmon outfit including the shoes and the shirt and a hint of salmon in the blazer. i want everyone to check that out. coming up, some familiar faces are reportedly joining the biden administration. why his latest cabinet picks are signaling a return to the obama era foreign policy and him and his twin american-first agenda. ♪
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♪ >> dagan: so long, america first. joe biden well on his way to undoing four years of president trump's accomplishments. biden's transition team is partying like it's 2008. he stocking his cabinet with obama eric relics like career bureaucrat tony lincoln will be biden secretary of state. and that's not all, john kerry is back, he will be the administration's new climate czar. greg, i am excited to see what john kerry has had done to his face but other than that, he could destroy, i don't know, our standing in the world as far as energy dominance. >> greg: well carrie is a spry 76, so i'm just curious what biden has against people who were born in the 1950s or up. because apparently he stuck in the 40s. it's like, here's the problem,
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and i think people will figure this out especially the media. trump has spoiled it for everybody because they are going right back to the trough. the trough of the same names, the same insiders, the same squalid bureaucrats that don't do squat. and they are back there and they just have to wait around. for four years, they wait around and write a few books and do some consulting. then when a democrat complain, they come back and get another job, they hang out and see their friends and eat at the fine restaurants of d.c. tropics, inspired all this. he hired outsiders. when he hired insiders, he got screwed. everybody's eyes are open right now, we see what's going on, we can't take this seriously. what is cnn going to do? if trump leaves, we don't know that yet, but if he leaves, what is cnn like?
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cnn is like a house that's put up for sale that a murder took place in. no one's going to -- oh like that's cnn, that's the trump place. what happened there, it's really bad, it's the trump place. >> dana: we are going to have to raise it. [laughs] >> greg: it's like a house where a murder took place and they are selling it. trump could buy cnn for a steel right now. don't do that! >> richard: listen, when president-elect biden ran he said he would make sure the cabinet looked like america and he announced that's what he plans to do, for the first time a latino man will handle security. with over 35 years of experience in the united nations post. >> greg: is a good? >> richard: in jamaica and can you come we could go on and on. what joe biden is giving you is people who understand how to run
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government. the number one problem that donald trump had in the first year of his administration was a whole bunch of folks who had no idea how to run the government. >> greg: that's why we loved it! >> richard: that's why the government didn't work effectively. to be fair, all the individuals who work for him have left unsaid is horrible including rex tillerson. we could go down the list. >> greg: be happy for that, you're a liberal. >> jesse: got off to a rough start because there was a coup. remember the witch hunt? that's the rough start. i like the difference between how the media characterizes these. if trump appoint somebody he knows really welcome the media calls him a trump loyalist. but if biden appoint someone he knows really well, it's a long time advisor, very close confidant. the same thing with the way they characterize the guys at resume, tony lincoln. this is what "the washington post" called him. they said tony lincoln is a centrist with deep respect for institutions.
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is there to rebuild our global world order and has a reputation as a nonideological consensus builder. this is a hard news article, not an opinion article. so how easy it is to be a democrat when you have the media writing press releases for you like that. i looked at him myself and he wants more and more refugees to come to america. that's not necessarily where the rest of the country is so i wouldn't call it cost centrist but there is a consensus he has a great head of hair and i will give him that. so that's a jumping off point for me. right now it looks like greg is right as usual. is this a return to normalcy, to boring people, people that have done this for years? career diplomats, anti-obama and clinton administration. these are not revolutionary ideas, not even bright ideas. they are there to rock the boat and people can get rich while everyone else is looking.
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>> dagan: we do know what he's capable of, the paris climate accord and chyron nuclear deal which basically hands money to nations that hate us. like take some of our money and use it to wipe us off the map. i don't think they will be able -- for example, nato is now paying more than they were four years ago. do you think that biden is going to say, actually, no. we don't need that money. no, i don't think that's going to change. a lot of people on the left including bernie sanders like the new approach on china and i think joe biden's eyes have been open on that, and i don't think that's going to change. i think the iran deal, if they go back into that, that will take some good communication to explain to the american people why that makes sense when we have seen how they've been stymied in their something new. i don't think foreign policy changes like that, i think a lot more domestic policy could
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change and biden's content to be the antidote to trump. the campaign is a return to normal guy and everybody he is announced has been somebody that's already confirmed by the united states senate. there is a strategy there to be like, i don't want to get hung up and maybe a mitch mcconnell senate. you've already proved these guys, let's check them off. >> dagan: i will still that idea from richard. check out this incredible video, a man jumps into the water to save his dog from a and the alligator. greg's monologue on that, when "the five" returns. ♪ bout subway? it's a good call and everyone loves it. we raised our kids on it. so it stopped the bickering? (mocking tone) "mom, jj's copying me!" grow up. mom! knock it off! try the new subway buffalo chicken or bbq chicken.
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alligator, here is richard wilbanks in his backyard caught on camera by the florida wildlife federation plunging into a pond to rescue his puppy from senate alligator. he risked life and limb at prying the helpless mutt out of the mouth of the scaling monster, without even losing his smoke. i'm sure when most people in the media saw this they thought, he might have saved that baby but his smoking is no example for our youth. i wonder who he voted for? but rich doesn't even break a sweat or lose his ash, he deserves the enemy, not cuomo. so this is not animals are great, it's more like humans are great, but what could this be an analogy for? is wilbanks a metaphor for america trying to wrestle a stolen election back from a swamp? or, is it trump trying to snatch america back from the jaws of media elites? they are kind of reptilian, now
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that i think about it. or is the canine actually joe biden and the reptile the far left democrats which is why we must keep the senate, or joe, that sad puppy, maybe eaten alive? where the puppy is just pack package and he's like he has an owner with stones or size of mount rushmore. >> all of a sudden an alligator came out from under the water and grabbed a little gunner and had him back in the water and was swimming off with him. it all happened so fast that fortunately i didn't have a lot of time to think. just the instinct of saving gunnar because he's such a wonderful little puppy, i just wasn't going to let the alligator have him. >> greg: there you go. so whenever you are thinking you are not up to today's unseen challenges, think of this guy. i'm sure wilbanks wasn't expect them to react that way to that event, but he did because he didn't think, he just did. not bad advice for all of us, especially me. all right, i was thinking jesse,
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you must have an analogy. >> jesse: hate to do this, greg, but that alligator was this big. it was a baby alligator. [laughter] you are acting like he charged into the teeth of a german blitzkrieg. he's like a baby and the puppy-like pranced away, he didn't even get hurt. you are making this guy out to be more than he has. yes, he rescued the puppy. >> greg: you wouldn't have done it, you would have let the dog died. >> jesse: rookie could have beaten up that alligator. >> greg: i think we have an experiment this weekend. we will put your dog and an. >> jesse: let's not get carried away. >> dana: i used to spend a lot of time in north carolina and my biggest fear were the alligator is when you would go by, that they would get the dog. i would always say to peter, what about an alligator? he would say jasper is too big,
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it'll never happen. but it does happen. to this guy, i think you're amazing and gunnar look super cute. >> greg: you know i once wrestled a pizza pie out of a dog's mouth who took it out the of the table. he only had as a mouth one slice. >> richard: strong richards come from florida. but what's tantamount to me, i didn't realize how small the alligator was, just a that out. you said maybe this could be donald trump. but maybe it joe biden and the 80 million americans that voted for him giving him back the democracy, and the puppy is a democracy. and donald trump the alligator. the little one. [laughter] with little hands. >> greg: they don't have hands, do they? do alligators have hands? i should look that up. >> dana: they have feet. >> dagan: i know a lot about
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reptile sadly, because i have no friends. [laughs] this is the new test for anyone who is judging a future mate or partner. what do you wrestle a puppy out of the jaws of an alligator? and by the way, their jaws are still incredibly strong. >> dana: and their teeth are sharper. >> jesse: that puppy just walked away. >> greg: no he didn't come he was bleeding. you are going to get so much hate mail and i for one cheer it on. like, i can't believe jesse didn't care. >> dagan: the puppy was bleeding, says louise, his wife. one more thing, wilbanks said he doesn't want the alligator removed from the pond or destroyed, that's part of nature and part of our lives. >> dana: i would kill the alligator. >> greg: i think we've learned a lot about ourselves and a lot about jesse. >> jesse: and it's not very good is it.
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>> greg: i'm kind of sad, i'm sad. the other thing, what if the dog is in there, but somebody else is telling you to go in and do it, but they won't do it? that would drive me crazy, you know what i mean? when the woman is saying, get in there! >> jesse: why doesn't have to be a woman? >> greg: it could be anyone. pete hedgpeth, he is a real hero. he is up with a new book, "honoring the real heroes." ♪ you need? just get a quote at libertymutual.com. really? i'll check that out. oh yeah. i think i might get a quote. not again! aah, come on rice. do your thing. only pay for what you need.
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♪ >> richard: pete hedgpeth has a new book out tomorrow. pete joins us to talk about the book. what was the inspiration behind this book? speak out the inspiration behind this book was telling the real stories of real heroes in their own words. my book, but it's not about me and i'm barely in it. you go behind the scenes and hear from their own mouths their fears and their anxiety is, how they overcame it, the pain and the sacrifice, the guys and gals who have served since 9/11.
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i think they feel a little bit more comfortable. it's raw, it's real, it's not politically correct, you will hear hard truths about what combat is really like and how they transition back home. these stories will make you proud to be an american and it's time we start collecting them and sharing them because society -- what we celebrate and what we honor is a reflection of value these men who have gone on deployment with lives on the line or who we should be learning from. >> jesse: pete, before we get to the book, i don't know if you saw the last segment but did you see the size of that alligator? are you on team waters or team got felder? >> i'm not going in that lake. i'd rather than comic walked on the streets of baghdad than take on that alligator. >> jesse: i didn't expect that, pete. but i will let it slide. >> they may be great, but they
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are unpredictable. i should deal with humans a little bit more. >> jesse: while that was a wrong answer but i will let that slide. i also respect the fact that you have a book out that you didn't write. i wish i could pull something like that off. but in all seriousness, with all the stories put together, what in your opinion was the most inspiring story where someone stared down death and got out alive? >> well, each page is a story -- these are navy seals, green berets, bomb technicians at dismantling bombs in the middle of firefights. these are snipers. the story that took me was nick irving, an army ranger sniper. he was given the nickname "the reaper" because it was so effective at killing the enemy. every patrol that went out wanted him to be able to oversee their movement as anyone would want company but the enemy in the ground and he was good at it. then he came home and couldn't quite figure out how to put the reaper away. he had the skills and was so
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effective at it, transition is a big part of the book, too. you will meet my former first sergeant from iraq was a total animal in a total warrior, saved his company from an assault in al qaeda. the ordinary people who get extraordinary training and then go to the most dangerous places on earth to live to tell about it, have the humility but also the insight that raw humanity. it comes through in the pages. i didn't write it, these are interviews so you are hearing it in first-hand words. i think we got them to be a little bit more candid than people are used to so you're going to get the real story. >> dana: i don't know if you were able to see the first block but i thought i would share with you a little bit of the news of the day because i know you've been so involved in this protection of people and their businesses when it comes to these lockdowns that are likely to happen again. they have basically had to be their own warriors for their businesses and maybe, get a comment from you on that? >> yeah, i mean for me once,
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shame on you, for me twice, shame on me. i think you will see a lot of business owners saying, this is my livelihood. these shutdowns are draconian and we know a lot more about this than we did when we were asked eight months ago to do 15 days to slow the spread. people are being crushed. you will see more defiance and rightfully so. guidelines are one thing, mandates on lockdowns are another. this is america full of free citizens with courage and i think the people say the curfew is over, the curfew is over. and i think we will see more of that, just can't take it. >> dagan: who are you most afraid of in this book? i would say jaco. >> probably jaco. he was a navy seal commander and a scary dude. he trained seals and went on deployment himself. but each one of them, you never want to be on the wrong side of a sniper, either.
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caroline johnson, female fighter pilot dropped bombs on isis. so it all depends on where you said and what your current assignment is. and you know what we dead? on the show or any other sometimes you only get 3 minutes to talk to somebody. the show "modern warriors" on fox nation gets these guys couple of beers, get some comfortable talking and telling stories and then you get the story under the story, that's what this book is, it went to the next level. that's when you learn how ferocious some of these guys are and how much they love their country. >> jesse: you got to drink and write the book? again, unbelievable. >> greg: i wanted to talk to you. a lot of people don't realize this but that you are covered with tattoos and i know you are due for another tattoo because you ge get a new one almost once every two years. i came up with a couple of ide ideas. first i was thinking, a bald eagle ripping a flag out of the hands of an antifa protester as it's trying to crack the liberty
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bell. and then i came up with one that i think is really good. so how about this, you should tattoo the pledge of allegiance in morse code, so when someone comes up to you and says, what's with all those weird freckles, you say that's the pledge of allegiance compan you communist. and then punch them in the face. you've got to do that, pledge of allegiance in morse code. >> if i say i'm going to do it, i might have to. >> richard: [laughs] thank you so much for joining us pete. you can pick up his book anywhere books are sold. we will be right back with "one more thing." ♪ aging is a journey. you can't always know what's ahead. since 1995, seniors have opened their doors to right at home for personalized care. to be their guide. to steer them through uncharted territory.
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better than warfarin. plus has significantly less major bleeding than warfarin. eliquis is fda-approved and has both. what's next? i'm on board. don't stop taking eliquis unless your doctor tells you to, as stopping increases your risk of having a stroke. eliquis can cause serious and in rare cases fatal bleeding. don't take eliquis if you have an artificial heart valve or abnormal bleeding. while taking eliquis, you may bruise more easily- -and it may take longer than usual for any bleeding to stop. seek immediate medical care for sudden signs of bleeding, like unusual bruising. eliquis may increase your bleeding risk if you take certain medicines. tell your doctor about all planned medical or dental procedures. ask your doctor about eliquis. and if your ability to afford... ...your medication has changed, we want to help.
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(voover sixty-four thousand whepets supported. the love, good things happen... ...your medication has changed, over twenty-five hundred wishes granted. over two million meals provided. over four hundred national parks protected. in fact, subaru and our retailers will have proudly donated over two hundred million dollars to national and hometown charities through the subaru share the love event. (vo) get 0% for 63 months and subaru will donate 250 dollars to charity. ♪ >> time now for one more thing. jesse. they go congratulations to nick richards. just got drafted by the hornets. pick number 42 in the draft,
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recruited to recruited out of jamaica, played three years with the tar heels in north carolina. he was actually in waters world many years ago at patrick school in hillsdale new jersey. we played a little one-on-one. he took me down in the post and embarrassed me. i was wearing my jacket. >> he would have embarrassed her -- >> some people say i taught him all he knows. >> [indiscernible]. >> he was so humiliated to be in this package with me. he doesn't even know who i am. >> he won't even fist bump you. >> i think he hated me. >> i think he did! >> i think he was 611. >> i want to picture what that guy. >> i don't think you would -- yeah. >> speech winter has congratulated him on. >> congratulations, sir! i'm next. you remember back in august, there was a terrible storm that tore through iowa, and it toppled all these trees. there were some good news. this iowa preteen, he's only 12,
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okay? 's name is tommy romberg and he's been using fallen tree branches and logs to carve hundreds of handmade baseball bats that he's been selling to raise money for relief. he came up with the idea on the day of the storm, it happened to be -- he made the first bat is a gift and since then he has carved over 200 bats and has a wait-list of more than 600 people. isn't he amazing? round of applause! round of applause. >> neighborhood. >> really going to bat -- >> i'm on deck! >> your next. >> greg's drunk squirrel news. another one of these. take a look at this little fella coming home from work after a night out. had a bit too much of the fermented parents. when you have the fermented pair you know because you can't really hold your balance, either that or he was doing sambuca, doing shots. i don't like it when animals get drunk because they don't know they're actually drunk.
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they just think they might be sick. >> i've never seen that with elephants? become no. >> there's a special first that they eat once a year, everybody gets drunk. >> great story, dana! >> thanks. dagen. >> macy's holiday windows this season are dedicated to all the essential workers here in new york. at the first responders, the essential workers. everybody who bailed us out earlier this year, but go to the windows, don't crowd around because you know cuomo's henchmen will show up with cattle prods to zap you. >> i will be there! >> richard! >> thanksgiving is thursday and a group of black entrepreneurs in atlanta are giving back by paying people's bill. they spend thousands of dollars purchasing other folks' groceries for this thanksgiving dinner coming up and here's one customer's reaction to this. maybe, maybe not. anyway, let's applaud these gentlemen for giving back to their communities.
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thousands of dollars in free groceries to this particular -- thank you for what you all do. >> that's really cool, loved it. love the show come everybody. thank you so much and think of are joining us. "special report" is up next. we have bret baier. hello, bret. >> bret: we do have bret baier. hello, dana. good evening. >> have a good show. >> bret: i'm bret baier, breaking tonight, one of the vatican states with the term campaign has been engaged in legal action has officially certified the election results for joe biden. at michigan announcing that move a short time ago. we will have updates on that, plus an update on motrin legal team turmoil shortly. also breaking tonight, increasing optimism about another vaccine against the coronavirus. astrazeneca saying it has a formula that is 90% effective without some of the logistical drawbacks of its competitors. the news helped drive the stock market to a positive start for the week. also tonight, another promising treatment for covid-19 has been given approval for emergency use.
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