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tv   Ayman  MSNBC  November 6, 2021 6:00pm-7:00pm PDT

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they say, that's amazing. how did you do that? i do it because i have like a good memory because i'm cognitively there. >> all right, look, if you have to insist on tv that you're, quote, cognitively there, well, all jokes aside it looks like governor haley may yet again be flip-flopping here. back in february she spoke to politico about the future of trump and the republican party and said at the time, quote, i don't think he's going to be in the picture. i don't think he can. he's fallen so far. she back tracked on that a few weeks ago telling "the wall street journal," look, we need him in the republican party. i don't want to us go back to the days before trump, which brings us back to now, with governor haley this close to saying what she really wants to say, that she does not want trump as the gop nominee in 2024. come on, governor haley, just say it. just say you don't want the guy
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who stared directly into an eclipse to be the republican nominee. just say you don't want the guy who incited an insurrection back in the oval office. it really shouldn't be this hard. we can agree on that. coming up, the gop and consequences, namely, what are they? i'm going to take you to some of the wilder developments following youngkin's victory. and how far could 6 billion go towards solving world hunger. and is musk really in? and it's the same argument that comes around every year, daylight savings time. it's rare to find a good one in favor of keeping it around. i'm going to see if there are any contrarians on my saturday night panel.
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let's get started. congress finally passed -- i say welcome to government folks. people hadn't done really anything of substantial. for example, republican glen youngkin's development on terry mcauliffe was based on something that was completely made up. it not being taught in schools in virginia or, quite frankly, anywhere else. but it certainly worked for youngkins and republicans are sure to follow his playbook next fall. his free embrace of a made-up issue is becoming a running
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theme for republican politics these days. no matter how wild a republican gets, there really seems to be no consequences for them. missouri senator josh hawley gave impassioned speech about how the world is supposed to be giving us a world beyond men, whatever that's supposed to me. >> when you look at the biden, the brandon administration in terms of -- >> wow. colorado congresswoman also got in on the action wearing a dress with a slogan printed on it. it was a hand fisted effort.
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aoc's tax the rich, the dress that she wore was to raise awareness of an actual policy to help the middle and work being class. all your dress did was raise awareness of how little class you actually have. and there's florida congressman matt gates, upset he has to pass through metal detectors to enter the house chamber. less wrenn to what he said at a campaign event in florida. >> i said is it c-4 we want to put in those metal detectors that we want fwlo blow up? >> reporter: she retweeted gates and said she'd happen improvide the explosives. really funny stuff. super appropriate and not at all offensive to the people killed
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at the capitol less than a year ago. remember i told you about greg youngkin's big win earlier? one person who wanted to help him win was his son, except for the fact that unfortunately he's 17 years old. he tried to cast a ballot for his dad not once but twice. now a spokesperson for youngkin defended the situation saying a 17-year-old kid who honestly misunderstood virginia election law and simply asked polling officials if he was eligible to vote,when informed he was not, he went to school. can you imagine if this kid's last name or first name was hunter or sasha or malia? it would be leading every hour on fox news. tucker would do a three-part docuseries about it. and secondly, what's going on with civic education in virginia?
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seriously. governor-elect youngkin, if you're going to get rid of crt, which again isn't even taught in virginia schools, maybe replace it with lessons in civics. listen, we give democrats a hard time on this show for all their infighting but it's worth remembering how easy republicans have it right now. their entire legislation of agenda is essentially to say no to everything. seriously. can you name a single republican policy issue that isn't a culture war? and the worst part in all of this is they're facing absolutely no consequences from voters for any of this nonsense that we just showed you. must be nice, huh? so much to dig into tonight with my saturday night panel. joining me now is an mtv news correspondent. they have spent a lot of time on the campaign trail with trump supporters. for the sake of satire, their new movie, "the supporters" is
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out now. you can watch it free at thesupportersmovie.com. the democrats have been getting a lot of grief for how painful these investigations have been, from myself included. meanwhile, republicans have just been sitting back and twiddling their thumbs and it makes me wonder if democrats here are being held to a higher standard than republicans when it comes to governance, by the media, by voters, given what we saw play out on tuesday. >> that definitely seems to be the case, ayman, especially when the republicans have already set the morality bar on the floor at this time. congratulations are also holding themselves to a standard that just doesn't seem realistic. we also saw that in the virginia governor's race this week where a lot of it seemed to kind of go backwards, like the fact that, yes, the republican candidate often made comments that were
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not true, like with the crt, which much of his campaign was focused on, as you just said, but also with mcauliffe. his campaign was extremely poorly run in the sense that they allowed him to continuously say, claim, he was campaigning with trump when it simply wasn't the case he made blatant lies. and at the same time the campaign statements, the things that he focused on were simply things that voters do not really care about, like his advertisement calling out his atonement for working for the company that stole taylor swift's music. he was trying to get people to care about his campaign because they were fans of taylor swift while youngkin was appealing to parents' concern over their children's education, which, yes, it was about crt but at the end of the day it's been caring for their kids and the other is about celebrities and other nonissues, literally not problems that people care about.
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>> you have greg pence, the former vice president's tweeting that help is on the way when the pandemic relief bill passed. that was after he had voted against that bill. i'm bringing this up because i'm wondering how many of the republicans who voted against this infrastructure plan will actually try to take credit for the improvements that it's going to make to the roads and bridges in their districts. i suspect all of them at some point are going to find themselves at a construction site saying, look, we made this happen. >> absolutely. they're all going to be cutting ribbons with hard hats on and everything. i think that's just how it goes. they're going to vote against it and then they're going to talk about how, you know, things are improving in their areas and try and take credit for that. but i think we've been seeing that over and over and over again. i wouldn't expect anything different and i'm glad a few people crossed over the aisle but the vast majority didn't and i think a lot of people are saying things like this is a big
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step towards communism. when there's a bridge where there needs to a bridge, they're going to say they did it. none of this surprises me at this point. it's all par for the course. >> sorry to jump in there. i just wanted to get jason's thoughts on this. i know you guys in some ways have been on the line going to these culture wars. kudos to you. you guys are like the war correspondents of cultural wars here, speaking to republican voters about crt. they can't actually what it is. one of the main people pushing this has even admitted that the term has lost all meaning. why does it get such powerful reaction from the people on the right that you're speaking to?
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>> the thing i think republicans do a lot better than democrats is they run on emotion. they don't run on policy and people respond to emotion. and up say something like crt and you make it seem like it going to stop parents from, you know, being able to teach their kids what they think is the right way and it resonates with them. it just happens that it's completely untrue and they don't teach that in virginia or any high school in the united states basically, but the republicans can run on emotion. and we see that at trump rallies. there is -- the people there are very, very emotional. >> i was going to ask you how you keep a straight face when you hear some of responses that you get. how do you do that? what's your secret? >> well, it depends. you know, in the moment when you're hearing something crazy, you don't really want to laugh at it because the person who is saying it, you're like if they really believe that john f. kennedy jr. is still alive or
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there's a body double for joe biden i don't know what they're going to do if they perceive me not as their friend. it's more about survival than keeping a straight face. >> you want to get out of there safely. according to the huffington post you had about 10 republicans at the january 6th rally that turned into a deadly riot, they just got elected into office at state and local level and most of them claim they didn't go into the capitol. they're trying to get off it have on a technicality or legality. what does it say about the state of our democracy that attendance al a rally that turned into an insurrection is not a deal breaker for republican voters? >> i mean, on the whole -- >> go ahead. >> i mean, on the surface level,
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it's what most of us can see. it the fact that our democracy is in trouble when we have the highest lawmakers in the land going o what was essentially an act of terrorism in the united states where people died, people were killed, our nation's was stormed and they are not being held accountable. i mean, it's as simple as that. it's been repeated so many times since january. at the same time i think there's also a severe lack of will from the democratic establishment to hold them accountable to the degree that they can. because right now democrats have all of the teeth. they have control of most branches of government and they are in charge of the justice department. the very same one that could serve steven bannon with a subpoena for not complying with the investigation, they can also do more to push. and i really think that this lack of will power is something that is going to hurt us heading in to 2022. >> jason, brace yourself for a moment. you talked about conspiracy theories. i've got some news that might be
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shocking for you. the qanon conspiracy theory was wrong about something. supporters gathered on thursday and were expecting the return of john f. kennedy jr. who they suspect has been hiding for decades. what the hell is going on here, man? explain to me how do people believe this stuff? >> that is a great question. we talked a lot of people who do believe john f. kennedy faked their own death because hillary clinton was going to murder him because he was going to run for senate. he's been laying low for 20 years waiting to come out of hiding to be donald trump's vice president in 2021, which is not no action year. there's a lot of people that believe that. so i don't know what gets you to that point because there's a lot of bridge, you have to cross
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before you make that leap. and i think that we should have just told them that he died on the way down there and that john f. kennedy jr. died on the way down to dallas and that's why he wasn't there and then they could move on and be like, okay, he's dead now, we believe he's dead, and then they can move on. >> i got to say -- sorry, go ahead, jason. >> no, no, i was just going to say that we met a woman on the road at a trump rally who believed that john f. kennedy jr. was alive. i bet her $100 that he wasn't and now after this in dallas, he didn't show up so i think i'm going to get that hundred bucks so i'm pretty excited about that. >> we call that easy money in our business. davram, one of my favorite parts about the j.f.k. jr. theory is the guy would fake his death for decades only to come back at trump's vice president. i see people wearing shirts that
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say "trump kennedy." when you're down there speaking to these people, what is going through your mind hearing them say john f. kennedy is going to come back, he's never dead and now he's going to run with the most republican of republicans. even if he is alive, it's like they're not even aware who kennedy is and what the kennedy brand of name represents. >> if he was alive he wouldn't be donald trump's running mate but there's too much logic in that. anything you look for, any thread of logic, it just doesn't go anywhere. apparently to a lot of these people, j.f.k. jr. is a real guy living in pittsburgh for decade, has a family and working as some financial analyst. there's a really guy that has stood near trump enough times. >> and if it is j.f.k. jr., it's an incredible disguise. he's like seven inches shorter
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than. jfk jr. was. >> it's insane. >> he bet this woman $100. she had a smile on her face but then she took the bet. she honestly believed this was going to happen. she was very proud of herself. she stays up until 3, 4 a.m. every night checking for cue drops and screen shotting in case they get deleted so she can share them with her friends. it's a world where people feel that they are part of some sort of club that is fighting for good. it's a very powerful feeling to be part of something and we can laugh at it and i think we should, it's hilarious but at the end of the day they're taking it very seriously. >> i was laughing at your use of the word q-drops because it seems very appropriate for the kind of stuff that is being put out there. so listen, i'm going to ask you guys to sit tight for a sec.
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a lot more to discuss. still to come, it's like shark tank but to solve world hunger. can the united nations world food program convince elon musk to hand over $6 million? >> and aaron rodgers on facebook for doing his own research. >> crowds began to push back and forth before falling on top of one another, along with trampling. it is now a homicide and narcotic investigation. tiger king star joe exotic announced he has prostate cancer he is serving prison time for twice hiring people to kill his competition carol basskin.
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a wise person once said that money doesn't solve all problems, but they probably weren't talking about billionaires. earlier this week the executive director of the u.n.'s world food program said just 2% of ef lon musk's wealth could help solve world hunger and musk basically said prove it. he tweeted out he would sell his stock in tesla worth about $6 billion if the u.n. laid out how it would use this money, specifically his money to address global food shortages and salvation.
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beasley told musk to wait a few days. he did say 42 million people are on the brink of familiar inso they could use the 6 billion to feel one meal a day at a cost of less than 50 cents per person per day. musk hasn't responded to beasley's latest tweets but listen, there are a lot of crazier things out there for a billionaire to spend money on like nuking mars or get to the moon. joining us rena shaw, principal and founder of relax strategies and she's a former republicans strategist and adviser. rena, we have a lot of theoretical conversations about how billionaires could better spend their money than these space races that we're seeing play out in realtime. what do you think about this? is this a good fix?
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>> well, of course on its face it sounds like an incredible thing when you break down the numbers and see how many people would be served, it sounds like why can't these billionaires make this one-time investment? this is just how elon musk wins the followers he's won over all these years. not because he created this wonderful thing called tesla, me begrudgingly. he does it in a begrudging way. he's holding the feet to the fire about open up and tell us how you spend your money. why are they doing this terrible stuff look forcing sex for food or something? we're going to get into conspiracy theory land pretty soon because that's where elon
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wants this. he doesn't want to part with this because he wants to call into question how other people spend his money. i think that's the bottom line. i'm a little scared for it to go there. i think right now it's on hold. i hope good people do step forward and say let's invest something here because this is a tremendous ask and it incumbent upon all of us to care about a very basic need of humanity, which is hunger. >> it seems like it's semantics with elon musk. there's no question that $6 billion would do a hell of a lot of good to help with world hunger. you want to criticize the u.n., it's bureaucratic, not the most transparent but you could go out there with $6 billion and do a lot of good to fight world hunger. it seems he was more about trolling the u.n. food program to try and get more likes on line like rena was saying. >> 100% he doesn't want to part with the money. he's making this little back and
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forth in which he's calling all the shots. i have the money now prove it to me that you can use it properly. i don't know. i kind of think he should have to prove to jason and i to the good liar that he's not a terrible person and i'll be the judge of if he succeeds or not. so i'll issue my own challenge to him in the same way that he is to everyone else to just prove to them that they -- that they can spend the money properly. but how about actually give up the money and prove to us that you're a good person and, you know, maybe we can watch that play out. >> we're going to make sure that elon musk gets tagged in that post, davram. we'll see if he respond to your challenge. >> i would love it. >> listen, jeff bezos has this week pledged i think $2 billion
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at the cop26 climate challenge that he sees it in a new light. do you have any faith that these people are actually changing? >> no. i mean, absolutely not. i mean, if they wanted to solve the world's problems, they could solve the world's problems because money is the thing that solves them for a lot of these things. i mean, just hunger, world hunger. you need food rations, you need supply chain management, storage facilities. you need to build the roads and bridges to get the food to the people. this is not just dropping food to people. this is actually like making the world connected in a way that we can actually feed people. and, you know, if jeff bezos wanted to use his drones to help deliver food, he could. and he could only use a fraction of his billions of dollars to do that. and i wish that, you know, it
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hopefully doesn't take going to space for the rest of these billionaires to understand that you should help humanity. right? >> if it does, we should find a way to get more billionaires into space asap so they come back with a different perspective on wanting to help people here. this is another example of a man who thinks he knows better than everyone else, mr. aaron rogers of the green bay packers, quarterback for the packers. he revealed he has covid-19 after it was discovered he hadn't actually been vaccinated against the virus, even though he says he was actually immunized. he says he has an allergy to an eningredient to the covid and is taking ivermectin. here's some of what rodgers
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said. >> i would have said, look, i'm not some sort of anti-vac flat earther. i'm someone who a quick thinker. >> what do you make of this mess with aaron rogers? >> first of all, he looks like he's doing great. but i guess what i make of it is you're a pretty bad teammate and i don't think there's any way around that he lied about it, saying i'm immunized and hoping to get away with it i think is a pretty cheap trick. but at the end of the day i think it's kind of hypocritical and, you know, we should be holding people to a standard. and i think he preaches all this stuff about being a good teammate and i think we just watched it play out in a way that he lost a lot of fans. >> even some sponsorship as
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well. just in case you thought it couldn't get any worse, aaron rodgers decided to bring martin luther king into the fight. take a listen to this. >> they said you have a moral obligation to object to unjust rules and rules that make no sense. >> i mean, i can't even imagine what he -- any time you are trying to invoke martin luther king jr. to make your point and in this case about vaccines, i just don't know what to say. what is your reaction to that? >> it's pretty similar to yours, just the fact that he basically compared himself to martin luther king jr. to begin with is good for you, buddy to have that level of confidence. i guess that's also why he feels so confident to do his own research into science behind the vaccine. i think there's also a lot to be
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said about the fact that aaron rodgers seems to have gone down this anti-vax after talking to joe rogan who is the male version of gwyneth paltrow in the celebrity world talking all these anti-science conspiracy theories about the vaccine. aaron, i'm sorry that you got covid. i've had covid, it sucks, but please stop talking to joe rogan. you're not going down a good road there. >> and please stop quoting martin luther king jr. when you're talking about covid vaccines. >> rena, all kidding aside, rodgers has now been dropped by at least one of his sponsors. ironically it was a health care company and it really raises the question of how dangerous is it what rodgers has done here? this health care company is out there telling the public, hey, aaron rodgers is someone we want to be associated with with public health and now we found out he's lying and getting his
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medical advice from joe rogan, we're going to drop him. but it is dangerous, no? >> i hope he doesn't do what gwyneth did and start a lifestyle brand. i do not want to see an aaron rodgers brand of food. i do not want to see that ever. i'll say before trump was around i was always, always worried about the professional celebrity, like the kardashian times. i can like somebody to are being a good player on the field. i says here's a handsome football player, there's not that many of them. i'm not trying to take my health advice from this guys but a lot of americans are. the cultive personalities, it's really dangerous for us and we have to stop doing it.
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i think the packers are accountable and need to be held accountable here. i think this is a big problem for them and shame on you, aaron rodgers. stop lying. you're a role model for kids. what are you doing? >> he either lied to the team and the team lied to the nfl and the team didn't know. we got to find out with getting away with simply saying he's immunized and no one asking for a vaccine card or check on that. i can't even walk into a restaurant in new york without having to pull out my vaccine card. >> he was doing homeopathic stuff. homeopathic. what? any of us would be held accountable by some entity to are doing homeopathic stuff to cure our covid. >> it's that time of the year it end daylight saving time. why don't we just end it altogether? t end it altogether
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all right. it is the most confusing time of the year, daylight saving time comes to an end on sunday. yes, that's daylight saving, not savings time. the cycle was introduced during war war i as a way to preserve coal and support the war effort. >> this year millions of americans are going to once again roll their clocks back and in no time next spring they'll have to roll their clocks forward. for what reason? i don't know a single person who loves to go through the trouble of figuring out whether their microwave or their oven has the hour right or anyone who looks forward to the sun setting earlier and earlier every winter. to put it simply, madam president, americans want more
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sunshine and less depression. >> so more sunshine, less depression. you can say that again for sure, senator murray. starting tomorrow the sunset here in new york is going to be at 4:45 p.m., which is pretty early. i feel like a loser already, so having the sun set at 4:45 is going to be even worse. surprisingly, though, this annual practice is wildly unpopular. in march a bipartisan group of senators reintroduced the sunshine protection act to get rid of standard time altogether making daylight time permanent. states are actually allowed to choose to remain on standard time. that's why it's hard for the rest of the country to keep track of what time it is in places like arizona and hawaii. but it's not easy -- it's not as easy for states that prefer year round daylight saving time. that would require a change to federal law.
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it sounds a bit confusing. i'm sure you got all that. in the meantime, let's just enjoy our extra hour of sleep tonight. i'm going to ask my panel where they fall on this issue when we come back. don't go anywhere. e when we come back. don't go anywhere. e the leader in 5g and a partner who delivers exceptional customer support, and 5g included in every plan, so you get it all. it only takes a second for an everyday item to become dangerous. tide pods child-guard pack helps keep your laundry pacs in a safe place and your child safer. to close, twist until it clicks. tide pods child-guard packaging.
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♪ ♪ ♪ daylight saving, not time has never saved us from anything, certainly not the higher energy costs it promised to lower. statistically there is proof that the twice yearly time change, which is much harder to manage than you might imagine, can lead to increased accidents, deadly accidents. and furthermore, the mish mash of time zones and time changes is just another example of this government overextending its reach into our lives.
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>> all right. just to be clear for everyone at home, don't up just love it when political tv shows parody capitol hill and end up looking a lot like real life? my panel is back with me to discuss this issue of great national importance, guys. i know it's important. we got to talk about it unfortunately. the department of transportation, which is in charge of daylight saving time, they say there are some pros to the practice. they claim it saves energy and prevents traffic accidents and reduces crime. those are the pros when we spring forward in march, where do you come down on this debate? what good comes from falling back? >> it's hard to say. i'm not going to argue that saving us from traffic accidents is a bad thing but i really think this movement to change or get rid of daylight saving time needs to be a mental health
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campaign. every time we spring the clocks back, we are more often in darkness, it causes depression, seasonal depression, people go on amazon and buy their sad lamps to defeat it. i had to do it when i was in college. it's just not a good thing for people's mental health, the bottom line. whatever other benefits that there may be, especially right now when we're going through such a mental health crisis throughout the pandemic. going into darkness sooner, losing that precious sunlight and daylight that is so good for our well being, it's just not worth it. >> that's a very important time. any time you're dealing with mental health, it's a serious issue, certainly coming out of the pandemic in terms of how it disrupts the body's internal clock. let me ask you, how do you steer clear of some of these pit falls in the coming months, the so-called winter blues as a result of daylight saving time ending? >> well, unsuccessfully, i guess. i usually get through december
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and january all right but it does get to me, you know, february and march it's tough. i remember i read at some point that the whole daylight savings thing was proposed by benjamin franklin because he was sleeping too late in the day when he was living in paris and missing too much of the sunlight. i know that's a problem we all have when we go to paris and we sleep the day away. so i think we should keep it because just in case, you know, that ever is my life, i want to make sure that i get plenty of daylight in. i'm for it, although some of you probably are not. >> by the way, that is where the expression paris in the springtime comes from. i don't know if you knew that or not. i just totally made that up. that's not true. >> i was going to say you learn something new every day but apparently not today. >> it was a cue drop. >> misinformation. >> one group of people who may have a special challenge going into this time change is people like me, a parent. "the new york times" notes that
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parents of small children often dread these shifts because it disrupts nap times and certainly disrupts bedtime routines. we've tried to get our kids sleeping around sunset. they're not going to go to bed tomorrow at 4:45, that's for sure. is that a good tradition to keep the lives of your children running around sunlight? >> we often laugh about things in society like, oh, it's going to require an act of congress. this would literally require an act of congress to have daylight saving time extended beyond the eight months. i'm begging congress as a parent of two young children and another on the way, i need you guys to act. this is complete nonsense to me. it doesn't make sense on the energy side, we've seen that. but more so, mental health is literally the thing that is being prioritized now as we come out of the pandemic throes and
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no better way to do it than to get more sleep. we're always going to be in a state of sleeplessness, young parents. but we've also heard of triggering in the week after the time change, there's also triggered spikes of heart attacks. that's scary. auto accidents, workplace accidents, people need to be productive, happier and healthier. i think it's definitely time to act. >> jason, you spend a lot of time talking to folks about things happening in congress. there's a bipartisan proposal right now in congress to get rid of standard time and make daylight time permanent. final a piece of legislation that will have the support of both parties. doesn't this seem like a no brainer? what do you think is going to happen? >> i think it is an issue that unites us all. daylight is worth saving, you know? there's always like a small group of people who are like i like falling back because you
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get that extra hour of sleep. that's one night. you get an extra hour of sleep one night. and then it's six months of soul crushing darkness. so i think if there's anyone out there that likes when it gets dark at 4 p.m., maybe you're not someone i somebody i want to be around anyway. i want to see the sun. i want to get the vitamin d. >> what about your mornings, though? do you want to give that up. >> i forgot about that. >> the impact every day. >> by the way, the extra hour of sleep argument, you do know you can just sleep in an extra hour any other time of the year, right? if you don't want to wake up -- >> and it's sunday, yeah. >> all right, guys. >> it really boiling my blood, actually. >> i can tell. you're going to make a whole episode out of this. we'll be looking out of that. guys, it was great to see you. thank you as well. great to see you as well. gretta thurn berg has a perfect
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sarcastic response for those telling her to clean up her act. plus, one year after rudy giuliani's press conference at four seasons total landscaping, meet the family that was thrown into the national spotlight. don't miss four seasons total documentary sunday 10:00 p.m. eastern on msnbc. to treat hiv. it's once-monthly injectable cabenuva. cabenuva is the only once-a-month, complete hiv treatment for adults who are undetectable. cabenuva helps keep me undetectable. it's two injections, given by a healthcare provider once a month. hiv pills aren't on my mind. i love being able to pick up and go. don't receive cabenuva if you're allergic to its ingredients or taking certain medicines, which may interact with cabenuva. serious side effects include allergic reactions post-injection reactions, liver problems,...and depression. if you have a rash and other allergic reaction symptoms, stop cabenuva and get medical help right away.
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luckily, sml is with american express business platinum, and has access to over $1000 in value per year with the business services suite. so they got new software and created a full augmented reality experience. sml won the pitch, and with their membership rewards® points, extended their hotel stay for a few extra days. they had a whale of a time. get the card built for business. by american express. an official message from medicare. did you try it yet? comparing plans? oh yeah. they sure can change year to year. i found lower premiums
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so teen climate activist greta thunberg definitely had a busy week. she marched at the un climate conference at glasgow on friday. joining other fridays for the future activist, she praised the group for being the true climate leaders. plus, she had this message for world leaders. >> it is not a secret that cop26 is a failure. it should be obvious that we cannot solve the crisis with the same methods that goes into it in the first place. the cop has been turning into a pr event where leaders are giving beautiful speeches and announcing fancy commitments. >> all right. so strong words for sure, but she had a much more pointed message for the adults in the room earlier in the week. >> we say no more blah blah blah. no more exploitation of people and nature and the planets. no more exploitation.
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no more blah blah blah. no more whatever the [ bleep ] they're doing inside there. >> all right. so her use of curse words made some people uncomfortable. so she was nice enough to tweet out this sarcastic pledge. i am pleased i decided to go net zero on swear words and bad language in the event i should say something inappropriate. equal output and input. we won't hold you to that pledge on our show. you can say whatever you want. thank you for making time for us this weekend. come back tomorrow night at 9:00 eastern. i will speak to huma abedin about her new book and i'll ask georgia secretary of state about the former president trying to escape criminal charges connected to that infamous phone call between the two of them. good night. two of them good night
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the question: what will they do with this momentum. breaking news in the president's plan to mandate vaccines for some u.s.

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