tv The Five FOX News January 19, 2021 2:00pm-3:00pm PST
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historians to chew over. and can the pandemic ever wipe away the reality that 400,000 americans are dead because of this disease. the president's message to everyone is we're a lot better off than we were. when it comes to the markets, there's no denying that. >> dana: i'm dana perino, 5:00 in washington, d.c. this is "the five." president trump receiving a farewell message lesson 24 hours before leaving office tomorrow. here are some of the highlights. >> we did what we came here to do and so much more. this week we inaugurate a new administration and pray for its success in keeping america safe.
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we extend our best wishes. we slashed more job killing regulations than any administration had ever done before. we fixed our broken trade deals. we also unlocked our energy resources and became the world's number one producer of oil and natural gas. we reignited america's job creation and achieved record low unemployment for african-americans, hispanic-americans, asian-americans, women. we confirmed three new justices of the united states supreme court. we appointed nearly 300 federal judges to interpret our constitution as written. nato countries are now paying hundreds of billions of dollars more than when i arrived just a few years ago. we revitalize our alliances and rally the nations of the world
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to stand up to china like never before. we obliterated the isis caliphate and ended the wretched life of its founder and leader alba dottie we stand up to the impressive iranian regime and killed the world's top terrorists, or raining but your custom soul many qassem soleimani. >> dana: if you want to see the whole thing, you can go to whitehouse.gov. jesse watters, let's start with you with that reflection on that farewell speech? >> jesse: i'm just thinking about the trump term like an acid trip. for some people it was really eye-opening and for some people it was just a bad trip. it really depends on how you experienced the last four years for a lot of us that paid attention, it was extremely eye-opening. the way he moved, he was able to really pull back the curtain. you could see how biased the
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media was for the first time. you could see the true threat of communist china. we got crash courses in constitutional law. we have found out how really powerful silicon valley was. it was really eye-opening in a very intense way. he was a populist, the first populist president we've had in many decades. in terms of the international order, he pretty much realigned it away from the old cold war, border where you trade, open markets for security annoyances. we have a much more nationalist approach and he was very focused on drawing down troops and bringing peace and prosperity. in terms of the economy, the first three years it was a middle-class boom. use our wages in three years go up nearly $8,000 on average. you haven't seen anything like that in 50 years. poverty dropped in an extent in
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50 years. he touched on energy independence and the fracking, the gas prices averages about 250, that was great. unfortunately what happened, his personality was so dominant and it created such a collision with the press and with the power structure in washington and corporate america that we all became so obsessed in the daily fight, the political persecutions, the investigations, and the brawling took away from all of the great things he did. because he had to be taken down because he was such a change agent. ultimately covid knocked him out. he wasn't able to survive the onslaught of covid. i guess the american people didn't feel like he was empathetic enough potentially, but the covid, the china alliance with corporate america, and all of the mail in ballots too much for him to handle in
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the end there. >> dana: katie couric -- oh, i was going to talk about katie couric earlier. katie pavlich, obviously, kate is in the b block. katie, jessie's point, whether it was a bad or good acid trip, it was a lot. the president, he could have kept going on and on but he gave his farewell address from that oval office -- from the east wing. >> katie: you would know this. i joke about how working in washington is like dog years, one year feels like seven and the trump administration is triple that. looking back at the last four years, i think the president over and over again proved a lot of people wrong. he completely turned the republican party upside down. he was told by the media that a number of his decisions would blow up the middle east, he
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would start a war with north korea, nothing he could do here at home would work and it would cause chaos but actually we saw a lot of results and i think he was able to change a lot of people's minds, infuriate others, and puree a lot of the right people to change things in washington, and what i liked today in terms of katie curette and this cancel culture we are seeing, he said america is a place where we have to be sheltered from tough debate and we shouldn't become a country like that. i think that's important going forward about a new administration going in and out able to have tough debates about policy without being silenced because people have different points of view. >> dana: katie pavlich, i appreciate you try to save me for calling you katie couric at the very beginning to very kind of you. greg gutfeld? >> greg: we get this commentary a lot about how much trump is in terms of psychologically how much he is to handle.
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boo frickin hoo! i will take that and exchange of no wars, i think that's what pissed me off talking about their sleepless nights instead of causing wars. this is what i would expect from trump. he's not going to let the media right his history. as always he's going to have to do it himself because like his voters, he is outside this gated narrative, right? he knows that nobody inside the media like some and will cut him any break about, think about it, the middle east, north korea, record employment for minorities, in general the most transparent administration in history. an average president would kill for a one or two of his achievements over eight years. think about it, he only needed four years of trump because he
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packed into 12 of it, the dog year analogy is key. also what is key about to about trump, there is been intensity of energy. he always went farther or further than anybody else. he would take off running and he would dare you to keep up and if you didn't, it was on you. he would get rid of you or you would leave. but no one could keep up with him. but good or bad, or indifferent, this was a phenomenon born from a broken political system run by elites who think americans are stupid little piggy banks. in 2016, trump wasn't elected because he was trump, he was elected because he wasn't them. he was outside that institution. he was not in the elites. he didn't have cozy enablers and politics and media around him all the time. he was closer to voters than any president i've ever seen and the dude was a billionaire. how do you explain that? how do you explain that a
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billionaire is closer to the american voter than any, more than a peanut farmer. remember him? great guy. >> dana: barely remember him, but i got it stuck in my mind. juan, less work for. >> juan: i will be brief. i think we have the better katie. >> katie: thank you, juan! >> juan: i was looking at the fox news poll at the end of the trump presidency yesterday, dana, and a simple question, are you better off today than you were four years ago, 66% say they are the same or worse, or you say, well, how would you characterize america and 77% i think said, we are dysfunctional family here at the end of the trump era. if you look at the president's approval numbers and again i'm not just talking about any elite group, i'm talking about what americans think, in the fox
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polling, he never hit 50% approval. i think his average was somewhere in the mid 40s and currently it's about 29% after the mob violence in the capital. i think that is a sense of where we are as he does his swan song. >> dana: we have that and a lot more coming up. we have helicopters behind us. facing backlash for his claim about the national guard protecting president-elect biden. do not miss greg's monologue up next.
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protecting voting for biden, the other is in the class that would be in the large class of folks who might want to do something. >> greg: probably racist. where might this political vetting of the military lead? will republicans be court-martialed or will biden build an army within an army? isn't this what they expected for trump? meanwhile there is this widespread video to instigate reprisals against, yes, trump's a secret army! >> in the years ahead, trump will lead his army of domestic terrorists, he'll encourage and incite violence, he'll play the role of arsonist and firemen, start a civil war and say things were more peaceful when he was president. we have to fight back. >> greg: he's going to be out of office where they can't let him go but won't that video lead to more violence, targeting trumpers? i'm not going to blame a video for violence, only democrats do that for the same people blaming you for the capitol violence are the same people who blame you for the summer's violence and the same people who blamed
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benghazi on a video. laugh. it's funny. it's happening again, the targeting of dissent by labeling words is crime so they can be silence. americans get it, the left's approved violence never matters. your vote? that makes you the klan. democratic cities are in violence, they are going to tak? >> i'm never on the side of the klan principled people, conservative or liberal, never on the klan's side. >> principal people who are conservative are never on the side that treats their fellow americans than less then, that says your fellow americans should not exist. >> greg: judging everybody by their worst element. when you bring up this contract, you get accused of what aboutism, but that's all history
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is, one long what aboutism in which the idiots of today are the idiots of the past, hence the need to hide behind feeble dismissals, but we aren't comparing actions, just the response to set actions which is the only way to keep people accountable. the media's defense of mob action allow for more in the future as they come for you? right now we have a salivating lynch mob formed from the press, academia, big tech, the d.c. power structure, linking commentary to crime in order to drive censorship, harassment, boycotts. ultimately arrests may come with 74 million domestic terrorists, we better get started. i want to go to a dana bash first. [laughter] it's kind of weird how the democrats, miss bash, are scared of their own truths. what does that say? >> dana: i think that... a couple of things.
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to the spot where they said each group, republicans configured todemocrats , liberals, even though they now have both the house and the senate, they still think they are losing the battle. republicans think they have lost the battle pure just a couple of things peer this is a list, jessie. here's a list for you. republicans told the democrats with the nervous minority in the senate, 50/50, cannot more narrow than that, we've got governors that are majority republican, majority of state legislators are republican, redistricting, and a 3-6 majority in the supreme course. they were set to lose the house, more seats in the senate, they didn't do that. i think when you have a fringe and criminals that did certain things, to suggest that is broadbrush and paint all 74 million people voted for president trump with the same brush that obviously is not
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good. and not true. and not fair. the media spent a long time after the 2016 election going all around the country saying to him who are these voters? they are the same voters. there were terrible people with terrible actions, does not mean all 74 million americans are the same. >> greg: assuming the best in the people you disagree with, not assuming the worst, i think i forgot my second point. i think the second point was better than the first point, jesse. >> jesse: thank you for your strong defense of what aboutism. that definitely needed to be said. 125,000 national guardsmen in washington when 25,000 national guards when in washington, d.c., i think that's a show of political force, when there is no threat
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and there's going to be no crowd because of speed 26 tomorrow and reports that a lot of guardsmen not they are with bullets in the chamber walking around unharmed. i do believe you got to beef up security in the capital after the mob attack on the capitol, but it seems a little bit overkill. are they doing that because they are paranoid or are they doing that to inflame the threats for innocent trump supporters to justify the crackdown? i don't know. congressman should be ashamed of himself to accuse the american national guard of plotting an assassination attempt because they are white males? by the left's standards, he should be canceled and the fact that cnn guy stand there and blinked at him was atrocious. he even got the exit polls wrong and that's what really makes me upset. biden won 40% of white male voters, not 20%.
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the left needs to stop acting like communist china where we will persecute political dissidents. that's more of a threat than if you crazy people storming the capitol in the long term. >> greg: jesse makes a good point, oddly. if you would apply cohan's ideas to a different race, the assumption that a group of people act a certain way, he would be toast. it's okay because they are white males and white male pluralists are evil as you know because you work with them, juan. >> juan: thank you, mr. what about. i would say that this is what about here. i think congressman's congress element comments are way over the top. i do not think you can make a judgment about people's ability to do their job on the basis of their political beliefs. i think that's wrong and i think it invites the kind of thinking
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that greg is leading us to. but i will say this in all fairness that just today in the news it says that 12 members of the national guard were found to have ties to extremists and removed from the group here in washington. it's not to say that this is alarmism. it is to say that a very small number given the high number of national guard troops on the ground here in d.c., we are bound to get extremists and the pentagon last week had to send out an alarm and say to everyone, we are here to defend the constitution no matter what your political beliefs may be. that's why i think today you'll have mitch mcconnell the senate majority leaders say, yep, president trump provokes that mob and other important powerful people in washington are added to that. >> greg: they say you should defend the constitution no matter what your applicable
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beliefs are which is exactly why they should be doing this to the national guardsmen. 12 of them, extremists ties, what could that be? >> katie: the pentagon also clarified and said that not all of them had anything to do with the capitol, only two of them did. my big question is how are they determining what extremism is, what are they using as their barometer for what counts as extremism. if you voted for trump, as a democrat said, or doesn't entail something else? really matching up against. and are we going to have the fbi who lost a ton of trust with the american people in terms of their own political biases over the last six years doing this? i just have to say, i know i'm already on the list after i named my dog gadsden and they are trying to say that's an extremist thing to do. he is already on the list. going to get canceled. >> greg: the only list i'm on
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is the harry and david email list. you buy one thing from harry and david and all they do is send emails. i want them to stop sending the emails. i buy one flower food basket. that's all i want! i had come of the media -- >> katie: they want you to be buying more. read: cnn is now asking a "b26 expert" how to do it >> greg: cnn is now asking a "covid expert" how to do it.
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somehow need to be deprogrammed. they bear members of a cult, the trump-ist cult. >> how do they deprogram these people who went up for the cult of trump? >> they had been brainwashed by this misinformation campaign over the past four years. >> jesse: cnn is taking the idea one step further by bringing on a cult expert figuring out how the deprogram americans. >> they were deceptively recruited by an authoritarian political culture. the bottom line is all of america needs deprogramming because we've all been negatively influenced by donald trump. >> jesse: greg, not to say how old you are, but you grew up in the whole cult frenzy era. what does this tell you right now? >> i'm pretty convinced that cult expert was in a cult and it
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didn't do very well, he basically has cult envy. anybody can be a cult expert. by definition, it provides a constant filter which you see everything through. a new religion is often called a cult, i feel ideologies are cultlike. being a trump voter isn't, doesn't inform how you work, eat, dealing with your family. a trump supporter doesn't promote estrangement from their family. however, people in a trump support his family often do the other side. there is a movement that is destroying america that fulfills the criteria of a cult. you heard it in those segments. its identity politics. if you see everything mostly white, if you see everything through the prism of race, that is a cult because you can't see outside it, all right? if you look at white people and see racism, deprogramming and see black people, victims -- that is a cult!
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what does that cult demand, total subservient subservience, no dialogue from . >> jesse: dana, could you just say that followers of barack obama were cultists? whoever is president -- >> dana: people did say that! >> jesse: it's politics. people admire -- exactly. >> dana: i think people said that. but the joe biden video, we go to that? >> jesse: he's doing a covid video. please listen. >> thank you, thank you. your eminence, colonel gregory, londa adams, to heal we must remember, it's hard sometimes to remember. but that's how we heal.
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it's important to do that as a nation. that's why we are here today. between sundown and dusk, let us shine the lights of the darkness along the sacred pool of reflection can remember all who we lost. >> jesse: there is president-elect joe biden reflecting on the lives lost in the last year. 400,000 in the united states due to covid-19. let's bring it back to the panel here. dana comeau we were
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dana, we were talking about politics in the previous segment but this is something even more powerful than that, 400,000 dead in 2020. it's been a rough year because of this virus. we have a new administration coming in and expectations that vaccinations will speed up. and we'll be able to get through this and everybody continues to be vigilant and help each other out. >> dana: that's a beautiful sight off the reflecting pond in the washington memorial. absolutely, jesse. the virus doesn't discriminate between right and left, everybody has been affected by this either because of a family member that got sick and is still ill or died or people that lost a business, people who have lost loved ones to suicide, even. there has been mental anguish that have gone along with this covid 19.
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there is also some hope. operation warp speed helped develop two vaccines and hopefully another one coming from johnson & johnson soon. going into the arms of americans. i also think it's shown that governments over and over failed people of all stripes. it doesn't matter again what your party affiliation is great if you needed unemployment insurance, it was hard to get because the system just doesn't work well. if you wanted to get a test, that was hard to get for a long time. if you wanted to get treatment, sometimes that was hard. some of the therapies that were developed were also difficult to get. things are looking a little bit better. we are turning a corner. we knew this winter was going to be very difficult, has been difficult for a lot of people and i think that's what joe biden was trying to recognize the night before his inauguration coming he ran almost exclusively on coronavirus and taking it on so i'm not surprised they are doing this tonight and people who lost family members, it's a nice
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moment for them, an important moment to recognize their loss. >> jesse: you brought up the johnson & johnson vaccine. we also have the astrazeneca vaccine to be approved in the next month or so. the johnson & johnson vaccine, that is just one shot. so people are very optimistic. if you get those into the pipelines, people feel like we can really turn the corner and get things back to normal if we can get 60-70% of the people vaccinated by the summer, late summer. we can end these lockdowns and get life back to normal and the biden presidency is really riding on what dana said, solving covid because that's what he ran on and that's where his mandate is. >> it's a massive challenge for any administration in charge. it's been a huge enormous challenge for the world, the economic consequences are not just going to last for this year but i will savor generations.
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people's lives have been clearly devastated whether it's through getting the disease, family members getting the disease are losing their livelihood in jobs, losing a family business that's been in their family for generations. but just devastating. joe biden's challenge moving forward is going to be managing this massive bureaucracy and infrastructure. let's not forget that the trump administration took off a lot of regulation to streamline the ability for companies to get the vaccine and to get it out to the states. there is now this logistical situation that the biden and administration has to manage as they move forward with new vaccines and the ability to get people back to work. >> jesse: juan, president-elect joe biden said he had a national plan for vaccine distribution. not really sure what that is. but he's banking on it. tell us what your thoughts are on that. >> juan: he says he's going to get people vaccinated.
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i think he said 100,000 in the first 100 days. dr. fauci said it's possible, he'll need the cooperation and financial support of congress to put in place more health care workers, more facilities, and a structure that helps localities decide how to go about this so you don't have confusion. i've got to tell you, i'm so lucky, i got vaccinated on sunday, jesse, and it's because my wife was online when the local health department put up some availabilities and she was able to get me scheduled. as you know, i'm someone who was struck by covid and i'm fortunate to be here. appreciate all the love i got from my "five" family here. i think it's a very scary thing and the, to me, it's very touching to see not only the life along the reflecting pool, but the idea i could here in washington the bells tolling
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from the churches. and you understand when you say 400,000 people lost, that includes 100,000 in just the last month. it's shocking! it's unbelievable. the toll this has taken on us as an american people, the hope has to be that this is the one point of unity going forward that all of us -- i don't care who you are, i don't care what you believe in the come of the say, we better get together and put this behind us. >> jesse: one thing that could be helpful, they take all the national guardsmen and the deploy them to states to administer some of these vaccines but i don't know why more governors haven't mobilized the national guard to help people get shots in arms. i'll give you the last part. >> greg: it's weird because i don't even know where to get it. which is fine, i'm pretty healthy. i know exactly where to get botox if i wanted it. why is that? one is government and one isn't.
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one is centrally planned and one isn't. i could probably go in and get some minor plastic surgery done tomorrow. i just might. but i can't find a vaccine. i think this incredible warp speed, they got this vaccine out and it's now being stockpiled because they are not sure whether they should hold half of it back or let half of it out -- they've just got to get it out there and start producing more of it. dana pretty much echoed what i said. the toll goes beyond the 400,000 dead. i lost two family members in the last 3-4 months. one in the hospital who died of sepsis. another one had an heart attack. the heart attack, he was fine, probably fine, but maybe because everybody was focused on other things, all these people that are not saying anything and skipping their medical exams, they are not going in manila collecting
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neglectingtheir illnesses, the n itself is driving them to abusive behaviors, whether it's drugs, drinking, suicide, the ultimate abusive behavior. this is probably the worst year i've ever lived in and i don't think i'm alone in saying that. >> jesse: here is to a happier and healthier 2021. juan, we are glad you got the vaccine and, greg, you don't need botox yet. pick up like a pro. just order on the subway app and it's ready to go with contactless curbside. turkey sub in a hot tub! now get 15% off any footlong when you order in the app. >> man: what's my safelite story? i spend a lot of time in my truck. it's my livelihood. ♪ rock music ♪
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♪ ♪ >> dana: a massive new caravan is heading towards america's southern border and according to one of the migrants, we can thank joe biden for that. >> what i want for my people, i just they are having a new president way. with biden, he's going to help all of us, giving us a hundred days to get to the u.s. >> dana: that migrant has good reason to believe that. take a look at what joe biden promised just last year.
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>> my first hundred days of my administration, no one will be deported at all. from that point on, the only deportations that'll take place are commissions of bellamy felonies inthe united states of. >> dana: biden planning a massive administration overhaul to undo trump policies, amnesty for illegal immigrants in the country. a lot of democrats, it's about shoring up political power because we just talked about covid and economic devastation of that combined with the health implications of a massive caravan coming to the border come and just turns into disaster. >> jesse: katie, let's play the democrats game here. joe biden incited a mom of immigrants to head towards united states of america. right? that's the game they play. he did make a lot of promises likes be 26 relief funds to
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illegal pluralist, free health insurance to a legals but no deportations. as you said, it's a super spreader event. since he's arrived, since biden is bringing back catch and release, what exactly is covid going to do when they hit the border? is he going to have border control agents? inserting swabs into noses? seriously! you aren't allowed by law to house minors with adults. how is he going to decide who was a smuggler or not. these are practical questions that he has no answer to because you literally cannot have open borders and a pandemic at the same time. for all the republicans are thinking about maybe joining the democrats to give amnesty with no return for border security, the last three republican nominees, donald trump, mccain, and romney, guess who won make the highest percentage
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of the hispanic vote? donald trump. 35%. he was the biggest border hawk of all. hispanics also want border security. remember that. >> dana: juan williams, do you have any comments about jesse's assertion to joe biden's strategy here? >> juan: what we heard joe biden say is there would be no deportations linked to felony behavior. he wouldn't say that there is an open border pain he's not speaking to those people and he's not speaking to that young man and giving him any reason to act differently. i do think that what we are seeing is, you know, they are desperate people who are fleeing violence, oppression, and looking for opportunity and i think they deserve at least our empathy if not all respect there that's why we have an asylum system, a long-standing asylum system in this country. we understand what america stands for as a beacon to the world.
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i will say, katie, what this remind me of is 2018. i remember the last time we were talking about migrant hordes in caravans and it was being used in the midst of a political campaign to try and whip up anger and animosity and it didn't work out. the democrats won control of the house in 2018 and the caravan after that, what happened to the caravan? i think we need to tone this kind of rhetoric down. i remember there was a shooting in a synagogue, oh, george soros is supporting the mob. this kind of thing does not lead to good places and what we need is real immigration reform. let's not undermine biden's effort to go to congress and get legislation passed in the tradition of ronald reagan and others. real immigration reform that we all buy into. >> katie: dana, a lot of republicans argued that the monterey conversion of immigration reform isn't
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immigration reform because the promise of border security was never followed through. >> it's very complicated. it would be the first test for the biden administration. legislation is a great goal. it's very hard to get. these migraines are going to keep coming before legislation can get off the ground. if we care about the human condition, and we do, i think ward has to get through these migraines that they are not going to be allowed in the country. whether they are taking biden's words or taking the coyote's words, or just stirring each other up, we have the means if you're an occasion to let them know that this is not going to happen, that they need to have a different plan, they need to turn back. also if we care about the human condition, the best way to solve this problem is to help deal with it at its source and we never, ever do that. >> katie: greg? final word to you. >> greg: illustrates one of the key differences between someone like trump and somebody
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like joe biden. there are easy solutions for this and that's saying things like, we are a nation of immigrants and immigrants built that nation with those those things are true. but you have to factor in all of these things are going on in 2021. there are different challenges and we are learning the costs of endless cheap labor in the sense that we have endless cheap labor that leads to low wages and high unemployment and when you shut down the border a little bit, wages go up and unemployment goes down. we are learning that tough decisions create benefits for this country. but this is how the media mistakes easy behavior for a hard ones where they act as though as if expressing these warm fuzzy emotions is so brave -- no, it's the hard adult decisions that factor in -- the empathize for everybody, right? that actually matters. but it makes you less popular. >> katie: open borders are not
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human borders. we see that time and time again. one more thing up next. start the year smiling at aspen dental where new starts happen, every day. get exceptional care at every step, unparalleled safety at every visit, and flexible payment options for every budget. now, during the everyday smiles event new patients get a full exam & set of x-rays with no obligation. no insurance? no worries, it's free. plus, now all patients can get 20% off their treatment plan. find every reason to smile. every day at aspen dental. call 1-800-aspendental or book today at aspendental.com hi, i'm dorothy hamill. if you're turning 65 soon, like me, you might be thinking about medicare. i know i want coverage that connects all the different parts of my health care to keep me aging actively. aetna medicare advantage plans offer $0 monthly plan premiums
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>> dana: i love that music. it's time for one more thing. >> juan: some of us have done tv from home studios and some mobile studios. look at me at the remote studio with comer man cameraman chris had been.that ir people who aren't on tv but want a remote office. now take a look at a new remote workplace graded by nissan. the office space extends from a van to create a separate office
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pod. the mobile office has a built in desk, herman miller chair, transparent floor, a coffee machine, and a sun deck on the roof in case you want to relax for a moment. at the moment this combination remote office is just an idea born out of pandemic but it may be an idea that has lasting power if more people decide they've got to work from home. >> dana: she looks like she's relaxing, taking a coffee break. lamar jackson, i'm sure you watch the game. he had a concussion and had to leave the game. the bills ended up winning 17-3. a member of the bills fan club, the bill's mafia decided to donate to one of jackson's favorite charities. other bills fans have decided to join in on the action and now there's been over 15,000 donors, more than 435,000 in donations and more is coming in.
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lamar jackson sent a thank you for the fans who did not something great for their opponent team a postures quarterback, but all the money kidsit's going to benefit. i'm going to do a football every day this week. >> jesse: this is footage of juan and i are gearing after the show yesterday. roll it. that's what it sounds like. i mean, we are both just screaming at each other. no one understands a word. i am sorry, america. >> dana: you are forgiven. greg, what you got? >> greg: really quick... ♪♪ animals are great...
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♪♪ in this pandemic you've got to learn some skills like this fella did for this is how you go get a beer. there you go. you know, the refrigerator isn't that far. who actually drinks beer in their kitchen. maybe it's a garage. there you go! and he is drinking busch beer. you know that's good beer. i taught my parents how to give me a swedish back massage but that's for another time. >> dana: we expect a video tomorrow. that'll be your one more thing. katie and what you have? >> katie: speaking of trained dogs, their names are ali and hugo and during the pandemic their owner taught them this song. >> dana: my goodness... >> ♪♪ if you are happy and you know it and you really want to show it ♪ ♪ if you are happy and you know it do a spin ♪♪ >> katie: right on cue, spins around.
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that could be the next trend. very cute. >> dana: to annoy greg, we should play that on a loop for the next 45 minutes. but we can't because we don't have time because that is it for us. "special report" is up next with bret baier and it starts right now. ♪ ♪ >> i did not seek it the easiest course. by far, it was actually the most difficult. i did not seek the path that would get the least criticism. i took on the tough battles, the hardest fights, the most difficult choices because that's what you elected me to do. >> bret: breaking tonight, president trump bids farewell to the nation with a recorded address just hours before he leaves the white house. >> to heal, we must remember that it's hard sometimes to
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