greg: yeah, all right, let s welcome tonight s guests. he looks like a car salesman and smells like an air freshener, cohost of fox and friends first, todd piro. don t let the accent fool you she s here to school you, cohost of the bottom line on fox business, dagen mcdowell! [cheers and applause] greg: he knows eight ways to kill a man with a paper clip, nine if it s rusty. former cia operative and host of the president s daily brief podcast, mike baker! [cheers and applause] greg: and if walls could talk, her office would be in witness protection. new york times best selling author and fox news contributor kat timpf! [cheers and applause] greg: all right. well, that s about it for me. before we get to some new stories, let s do this. greg s leftovers. greg: yeah. it s leftovers where i read the jokes we didn t use this week and as always it s my first time reading them. so if we suck we ll staple joe machi to a wall and use his head as a dart board. earlier
[cheers and applause] greg: yeah, all right, let s welcome tonight s guests. he looks like a car salesman and smells like an air freshener, cohost of fox and friends first, todd piro. don t let the accent fool you she s here to school you, cohost of the bottom line on fox business, dagen mcdowell! [cheers and applause] greg: he knows eight ways to kill a man with a paper clip, nine if it s rusty. former cia operative and host of the president s daily brief podcast, mike baker! [cheers and applause] greg: and if walls could talk, her office would be in witness protection. new york times best selling author and fox news contributor kat timpf! [cheers and applause] greg: all right. well, that s about it for me. before we get to some new stories, let s do this. greg s leftovers. greg: yeah. it s leftovers where i read the jokes we didn t use this week and as always it s my first time reading them. so if we suck we ll staple joe machi to a wall and use his head as
and perhaps with the democratic president? look. it s important to understand that all it takes is a majority. the problem as we sit here is not one senator. the problem is 52 senators who believe that pharmaceutical costs are too low apparently, that there isn t enough wealth inequality in the world, that the climate isn t heating up. that s a problem. i ll take any senator who s actually willing to stand up and do that. now, to be fair, if we get everything done, we still have a very transformative bill. we re doing fantastic things in here to lower you know, to provide seniors with access to dental and vision care, to expand access to child care. there s still some really good things in there, but the question is in this moment, are we going to do what scientifically is necessary or are we going to fall back on what s plilticily possible? the planet doesn t really care about the politics of a few senators, and we just have to keep that in mind as we push forward. all right.
our bosom. we need this planet. the planet doesn t need us. so that s why fixing climate change isn t about saving the planet. it is literally about saving us. we see the impacts here and today, and it makes every kind of financial sense, as well as ethical sense to do everything we can as much as possible, as soon as possible. well, talk to me about what you believe might be the struggle about trying to get people to talk more openly, more graphically, about climate change. and expressing whether they have a good grasp of just how serious the matters are. we are not talking about climate change. a recent survey showed that 14% of us talked about it frequently. 34% of us hear somebody else talk about it, or talk about it ourselves occasionally. why does that matter? because if you don t talk about it, why would we care? if we don t care, why would we ever want to do anything about it. the most important thing we as
consequences of non native fir tree plantations, which are completely decimating native flora. so, the key thing is to have science based decisions on the right tree in the right place for the right outcome. and that is entirely achievable, but it s secondary to protecting what you already have. we re speaking as world governments approach this cop26 meeting in glasgow, where they are supposed to gather and deliver new commitments to ensure that the planet doesn t warm more than 1.5 degrees celsius from pre industrial levels. they all talk a good. well, most of them talk a very good game, but do you think the words are matched by actions? it s impossible to overstate the importance of this conference. the british government has rightly and proudly signed up to net zero by 2050. well, that s my point. i mean, governments are signing up to all sorts of targets and promises, but are the actions there? because, to quote the secretary general of the un, he said,