dramatically that we ll have a hard time keeping everyday life operating. already we are seeing it in our healthcare settings where we can lose our healthcare workers who are not available to work. we are seeing that right now in critical infrastructure area where people can t come to work. to me, ideally you would like to have more time to allow people to clear the virus and not potentially be transmitting it. at the same time we got to have people who are there everyday who are doing the work. how can you provide the safest environment. i support what they are doing. i think it s not perfect. it won t be perfect and what we have come before us the next few weeks is hardly going to allow for a perfect response. one of the things that raised our eye brows yesterday, dr. wallensky, when i asked her should you show a negative test after five days and not just put a mask when you go back to school. she says well a lot of those tests will show you positive
place. roughly a quarter of the crowd that gathers here. chicago is also moving ahead with their festivity but choosing to spread out its fireworks along the river to alleviate crowding. not only outdoors but to spread it out so we don t have massive crowds in one place. reporter: some other major cities are scrapping their celebrations, atlanta and los angeles cancelled their events, and up the coast in seattle, fireworks will be going at an empty street as crowds won t be able to gather. we won t see them lighting up the skies in paris, london and berlin and rome. much of europe is avoiding mass
ineffective voices i ve ever heard. the amazing part of it, and i m all for it, sent her out. send her everywhere. every train station, get that woman out there. they say we want to give her a more typical schedule because of covid, she couldn t go out and the crowds couldn t come out. the crowds won t come out anyway! just put her on, don t let her talk, let her laugh. geraldo: so mean, so mean. jesse: this is a good idea, we need her in every swing states come on television. dagen: her husband got covid and even she didn t because covid didn t want to have anything to do with her. jesse: that s harsh. it s dagen: she spoke to herbiggee and they blame covid saying we need to keep the crowds intentionally sparse. she can t even control her wallet. as a woman who tends to be shrill that is the first thing you need to work on.
the founders would have hated this. we know this for sure. george washington bristled when someone tried to describe him as your excellency. when kim sent a letter to trump addressed as your excellency, trump loved it. the founders were very clear that people like julius caesar and oliver cromwell were what we were not supposed to be. on this most patriotic day, we have a president that acts in a very unamerican fashion. there is reporting that there is concern in the white house that the crowds won t be big enough and this is going to be sprayed from the concert and so on. they are worried more people will go to this traditional event rather than necessarily here at the president s. to the question of his speech, we know that he has been advised to keep this a political. what are you hearing? how concerned are republicans and the white house that he will
confused what he sees and hears in the hall in front of him for the country. he has been speaking to a neco-chamber for over a year, and he gets that adulation from the crowd, and that s all he feels and hears. he doesn t really feel the country. they re very big crowds, and for, eddie, the first nine months, ten months, 11 months, 12 months of his campaign, big crowds. equal big poll results. equal big victories. as we started saying back in the spring, you got to shift. you go into a general election, those crowds won t win it for you. what would you have donald trump do tonight if you were flying out to las vegas and had his ear and he would listen to you? that would be hilarious. i would actually insist that he hit her on trade, that he hits those he hits the questions