00:02:49.000I was in Walgreens today and I was shopping around for snacks and this guy was talking to one of the workers and saying, Do you know, is there any hand sanitizer?
00:02:59.000And the worker was saying, No, man, it's flying off the shelves faster than it's coming in.
00:03:17.000This boomer cashier was talking to an awful customer, affluent white female liberal customer, and he was saying, There's only 1,300 people infected.
00:09:50.000When they talk about traffic down there, they're talking about squirrels, they're talking about raccoons, possum, skunk, things like that, coyotes.
00:10:43.000I'm going like 70, 80 miles per hour down one of these, like, Country roads, and this family literally a family of deer just straight up posted in the middle of the street.
00:10:55.000And you can't even see them until you're, you know, incoming because it's pitch black, there's no street lights.
00:11:05.000So, but again, my good reflex prevented me from colliding.
00:11:09.000I almost crashed into a bear one time.
00:11:12.000I was in Tennessee, I was in Gatlinburg.
00:11:17.000In the Smoky Mountains, and I was driving up a mountain, and there was a huge family of bears, a huge mother bear, and all these cubs crossing the street.
00:11:29.000I didn't almost hit them because I was driving much slower because I was driving like up a mountain, like it's a winding mountain road, but it freaked me out.
00:20:11.000The other one time I was talking to my mom, and I forget what the conversation was about, but I was like, oh, I ate this because I wanted protein.
00:20:23.000And I think we had leftover raviolis in the fridge.
00:20:27.000And I was like, oh, I didn't eat that because I wanted protein.
00:21:31.000We don't, in Chicago, I don't know if it's a regional thing, but growing up, when we talked about ourselves as being Italian, we never used the word WAP or like Guinea.
00:27:43.000Patrick Casey tweets, or I'm sorry, Patrick Casey's assistant tweeted, Dude, the Me Too stuff is the evolution of the same, very same process, progressivism, responsible for destroying our civilization.
00:27:57.000Weinstein is hardly a master in the grand scheme of things.
00:27:59.000The people who run the show remain on touch as usual.
00:28:02.000If you don't stick up for Harvey Weinstein, you're a simp for feminists, T. Optometrist, man.
00:28:37.000You know, that wasn't a part of any conflict, but he just joined on with them.
00:28:44.000So, I'm not, look, I'm not saying anything, but it's like, dude, why?
00:28:50.000The one time he's being cringe here that I'm seeing right now, and it's, you know, if you don't stick up for Harvey Weinstein, you're a simp and a feminist.
00:28:58.000I don't think that's what he was saying.
00:29:00.000I don't think that's what Patrick was getting at, but it's weird that James.
00:29:03.000As always, is on the wrong side of thought conflicts.
00:32:53.000I want to show you because I saw this the other day and it was like, Let me see, It was on, it was in the comment section of one of their podcasts and it was just so and it was so boring.
00:36:17.000Today, I'd like to provide an update to the American people on several decisive new actions we're taking in our very vigilant effort to combat and ultimately defeat the coronavirus.
00:36:33.000We've been working very hard on this, we've made tremendous progress.
00:36:38.000When you compare what we've done to other areas of the world, it's It's pretty incredible.
00:36:44.000A lot of that had to do with the early designation and the closing of the borders.
00:36:52.000And as you know, Europe was just designated as the hotspot right now, and we closed that border a while ago.
00:37:01.000So that was lucky or through talent or through luck, call it whatever you want.
00:37:07.000But through a very collective action and shared sacrifice, national determination, we will overcome the threat of the virus.
00:37:16.000I also announced Wednesday night, following the advice of our medical professionals who are doing a tremendous job, and we appreciate it very much, that we're suspending the entry of foreign nationals who have been to Europe in the last 14 days from entering the United States.
00:37:34.000Citizens, permanent residents, and our families, any of the families returning from Europe will be subject to extra screening as well as self-isolation for a period of 14 days.
00:37:46.000As the World Health Organization confirmed today, many of the things that we said were 100% correct, including our designation before them of Europe.
00:38:01.000Like our earlier very aggressive actions with China, this measure will save countless lives.
00:38:09.000I appreciate a number of the folks behind me, a number of the people behind me said that that saved a lot of lives at early designation.
00:38:19.000But it is only the beginning of what we're really doing, and now we're in a different phase.
00:38:25.000We had some very old and obsolete rules that we had to live with.
00:38:29.000It worked under certain circumstances, but not under mass circumstances.
00:38:34.000They were there for a long time, they were in place for a long time, and we're breaking them down now.
00:38:38.000And they're very usable for certain instances, but not for this.
00:38:42.000To unleash the full power of the federal government in this effort today, I am officially declaring a national emergency.
00:38:53.000The action I am taking will open up access to up to $50 billion of very importantly, very important and a large amount of money for states and territories and localities in our shared fight against this disease.
00:39:11.000In furtherance of the order, I'm urging every state to set up emergency operation centers effective immediately.
00:39:16.000You're going to be hearing from some of the largest companies and greatest retailers and Medical companies in the world are standing right behind me and inside of me.
00:39:27.000I'm also asking every hospital in this country to activate its emergency preparedness plan so that they can meet the needs of Americans everywhere.
00:39:45.000We had a very good conversation, and we're working very strongly with many states, including New York.
00:39:53.000The emergency orders I'm issuing today will also confer broad new authority to the Secretary of Health and Human Services.
00:40:01.000The Secretary of HHS will be able to immediately waive provisions of applicable laws and regulations to give doctors, hospitals, all hospitals, and healthcare providers maximum flexibility to respond to the virus and care for patients.
00:40:19.000This includes the following critical authorities the ability to waive laws to enable Telehealth, a fairly new and incredible thing that's happened in the not so distant past.
00:40:37.000I tell you, what they've done with telehealth is incredible.
00:40:41.000It gives remote doctors visits and hospital check-ins the power to waive certain federal license requirements so that doctors from other states can provide services in states with the greatest need.
00:40:55.000Number two, the ability to waive requirements that critical access hospitals limit the number of beds to 25 and the length of stay to 96 hours.
00:41:07.000The ability to waive the requirements of a three day hospital stay prior to admission to a nursing home big thing.
00:41:15.000The authority to waive rules to hinder hospitals' ability to bring additional physicians on board or obtain needed office space.
00:41:23.000They can do as they want, they can do what they have to do.
00:41:29.000Now they don't have any problem getting it done.
00:41:33.000The authority to waive rules that severely restrict where hospitals can care for patients within the hospital itself, ensuring that the emergency capacity can be quickly established.
00:41:45.000We'll remove or eliminate every obstacle necessary to deliver our people the care that they need and that they're entitled to.
00:41:55.000No resource will be spared, nothing whatsoever.
00:41:59.000Ten days ago, I brought together the CEOs of.
00:42:02.000Commercial labs at the White House and directed them to immediately begin working on a solution to dramatically increase the availability of tests.
00:42:12.000Other countries have called us and worked with us, and they're doing similar things or will be doing similar things.
00:42:20.000As a result of that action today, we're announcing a new partnership with the private sector to vastly increase and accelerate our capacity to test for the coronavirus.
00:42:32.000We want to make sure that those who need a test can get a test very quickly.
00:42:36.000Safely, quickly, and conveniently, but we don't want people to take a test if we feel that they shouldn't be doing it.
00:42:46.000And we don't want everyone running out and taking only if you have certain symptoms.
00:42:51.000Using federal emergency authorities, the FDA approved a new test for the virus.
00:42:57.000We did this within hours after receiving the application from Roche, a process that would normally take weeks.
00:43:05.000We therefore expect up to a half a million additional tests will be available.
00:43:10.000Early next week, we'll be announcing locations probably on Sunday night.
00:43:15.000I want to thank Roche, a great company, for their incredible work.
00:43:20.000The FDA's goal is to hopefully authorize the application within 24 hours.
00:43:26.000It'll go very quickly, it's going very quickly, which will bring additionally 1.4 million tests on board next week and 5 million within a month.
00:43:38.000I doubt we'll need anywhere near that.
00:43:40.000At the same time, we've been in discussions with pharmacies and retailers to make drive-through tests available in the critical locations identified by public health professionals.
00:43:52.000The goal is for individuals to be able to drive up and be swabbed without having to leave your car.
00:45:15.000Dr. Burks is a highly respected person I've gotten to know very well over the last six days.
00:45:24.000And what we've done is rebuilt something that was very old, very old fashioned, somewhat obsolete, certainly obsolete when it comes to the kind of numbers that we're talking about.
00:45:42.000It's a pleasure to be here with all of you.
00:45:44.000I think you know at the beginning of this epidemic, HHS through CDC proactively developed a system built on the existing flu surveillance unit.
00:45:55.000That surveillance system was then converted to a diagnostic system.
00:45:59.000But last Tuesday, seeing the spread of the virus around the globe, the president realized that our current approach to testing was inadequate to meet the needs of the American public.
00:46:10.000He asked for an entire overhaul of the testing approach.
00:46:15.000He immediately called the private sector laboratories to the White House, as noted.
00:46:19.000And charge them with developing a high throughput quality platform that can meet the needs of the American public.
00:46:25.000We are grateful to LabCorp and Quest for taking up the charge immediately after the meeting and within 72 hours bringing additional testing access, particularly to the outbreak areas of Washington State and California and now across the country.
00:46:41.000We are also very grateful to the universities and large hospital systems that took up the charge to develop their own quality tests made available by new.
00:46:51.000This has resulted in expanded testing across New York, California, Washington, Colorado, and you see sometimes those drive through options that have been made available through these high throughput options.
00:47:02.000Following the meeting last week, major commercial laboratory equipment and diagnostic companies took immediate action to adopt and develop new testing systems.
00:47:12.000Last night, the initial company, Roche, received FDA approval, moving from request to development to approval in record time.
00:47:22.000This innovative approach centered fully on unleashing the power of the private sector, focusing on providing convenient testing to hundreds of thousands of Americans within short turnaround times.
00:47:34.000In less than two weeks together, we have developed a solution that we believe will meet the future needs, testing needs of Americans.
00:47:43.000I understand how difficult this has been.
00:47:45.000I was part of the HIV AIDS response in the 80s.
00:47:49.000We knew from first finding cases in 1981, it took us to almost 1985 to have a test.
00:47:58.000It took us another 11 years to have effective therapy.
00:48:02.000It is because of the lessons learned from that that we were able to mobilize.
00:48:07.000And bring those individuals that were key to the HIV response to this response.
00:48:12.000I understand that a lot of this behind the scenes action over the last couple of weeks was invisible to the press and the American people.
00:48:21.000But this intense effort has not only resulted in innovative solutions, but an automated high throughput system bringing the availability of these quality coronaviral testing to the American people at unprecedented speed.
00:48:35.000Finally, I want you to know in South Korea, They did have a large number of tests available over the last several weeks.
00:48:43.000Their positivity rate is between 3 and 4 percent.
00:48:47.000With LabCorp and Quest's expanded testing, their positivity rate is between 1 and 2 percent.
00:48:54.000So, we want to also announce this new approach to testing, which will start in the screening website up here, facilitated by Google, where clients and patients and people of interest can go fill out a screening questionnaire.
00:49:11.000Move down for symptoms or risk factors, yes.
00:49:15.000They would move down this and be told where the drive through options would be for them to receive this test.
00:49:22.000The labs will then move to the high throughput automated machines to be able to provide results in 24 to 36 hours.
00:49:49.000You've become a, I think everybody out here knows you pretty well, but Tony has been doing a tremendous job working long, long hours, and you've seen a lot happen, but this has been a great experience, and working with you has been terrific.
00:50:08.000This is an example of another example of.
00:50:12.000What I've been referring to in my discussions with many of you in the audience as a proactive, leaning forward, aggressive, trying to stay ahead of the curve.
00:50:23.000And what you've seen now with this order is that we're going to be able to remove the constraints so that people at the state, the local level, the individual physician, all the way up through the federal government, will have as many constraints as possible removed for them to do everything they possibly can so that we can implement the things that we've been talking about.
00:50:45.000The containment, The mitigation, so that as I've said many times, that curve that I refer to that goes up, we don't want to have that curve.
00:50:54.000We want to suppress it down to that small mound.
00:50:57.000And I think what we've done today is something that is going to be a very important element in having us be successful in doing that.
00:51:49.000So we've been asked to make portions of our parking lot available in select locations in the beginning and scaling over time as supply increases so that people can experience the drive-through experience that the President described.
00:52:00.000We'll stay involved and do everything we can from a supply chain point of view to be of assistance.
00:52:15.000And similar to Doug and Walmart, we're happy to stand in here and help in communities all across America because a lot of times when we have natural disasters, our stores are a beacon in the community, and this situation is no different.
00:52:28.000So we look forward to partnering with the CDC, the administration, HHS.
00:52:32.000And the task force, and specifically to the vice presidents, doing such a fantastic job.
00:52:49.000Well, Mr. President, thank you for inviting us here today, along with our colleagues from Walmart and Walgreens and our partners at CVS.
00:52:56.000Normally, you'd view us as competitors, but today we're focused on a common competitor, and that's defeating the spread of the coronavirus.
00:53:04.000And we look forward to working with the administration to do our fair share to alleviate this growing threat.
00:53:13.000In the near term, we're all committed to making sure we're keeping our stores open to serve the American consumer who's rapidly stocking up on household essentials, key food and beverage items that they need during this time, making sure we run safe stores and create an environment that's safe for our team members, making sure that they feel supported during this very critical time.
00:53:43.000As CEO of Beckton Dickinson, we're one of the providers of medical devices as well as products for testing of coronavirus.
00:53:51.000We're ramping up our manufacturing capacity to ensure that the right collection devices and testing equipment are ready to address this issue.
00:54:12.000As the President mentioned, we were called for the leadership of the Vice President last week to come together as an industry, and we took advantage of that opportunity to work with the FDA, to work with the Center for Disease Control, and we are up and running with tests in a number of our facilities.
00:54:29.000As the President mentioned, we now have capabilities from Roach Diagnostics.
00:54:35.000This weekend, and I know myself and us.
00:54:38.000My colleague at LabCorp will be doing the same.
00:54:41.000So, the capacity available to the American public to support this action with consumers will be considerably increased in the next few weeks.
00:54:59.000So, from Roche, we want to thank the FDA for their rapid approval of our coronavirus test.
00:55:07.000We really appreciate the partnership with the CDC and the FDA to get that to market as fast as possible.
00:55:12.000Because it's critical for us to make that available to help patients in need and working with laboratories to get it up and going in the near future, which will bring hundreds of thousands of tests available to patients in need in the United States.
00:55:36.000We are the largest house call provider in the U.S., and we go to the homes of the most vulnerable elderly.
00:55:45.000And through our network and our logistics engine, we stand ready to help and provide our clinicians to be where they're needed, whether they're in retail clinics or in the home.
00:56:00.000And we'll be changing a lot of the rules and regulations for the future, should this happen in the future, which we hope it never does, but it will, I guess, somewhere out there.
00:56:11.000Some bad ones over the years, and I guess that'll continue to an extent, but we hope it never happens, but we're going to be changing a lot of the old rules and specifications and regulations.
00:56:25.000Adam Schechter, who's really been of tremendous help, Lab Corp, please.
00:56:32.000At LabCorp, we're working every second of every day to increase the number of tests that we can run.
00:56:37.000We're working with academic medical centers, with our colleagues at Quest, with other hospital and other laboratories to ensure that we do everything we can to increase the testing as we move forward.
00:56:48.000And I can tell you, we understand how important the testing is, and we are committed to doing everything possible.
00:57:05.000We have been focused since the start of making sure our patients and the customers we serve have the information they need, the safety they need as well.
00:57:13.000We are committed to working with the administration and local public health officials to make this work as well.
00:57:34.000Our industry has been treating patients and seniors in the safety and comfort of their own home for decades.
00:57:40.000We're very proud to be part of the equation for testing in their own home.
00:57:44.000For Americans that can't get to a test site or live in rural areas far away from a retail establishment, we're here to help and to partner with our hospitals and physicians as well as the people we have here today that will be doing testing around the country.
00:58:01.000I'm also announcing the following emergency executive actions today.
00:58:06.000To help our students and their families, I've waived interest in all student loans held by federal government agencies, and that will be until further notice.
00:58:17.000That's a big thing for a lot of students that are left in the middle right now.
00:58:21.000Many of those schools have been closed.
00:58:23.000Based on the price of oil, I've also instructed the Secretary of Energy to purchase, at a very good price, large quantities of crude oil for storage in the U.S. Strategic Reserve.
00:58:37.000We're going to fill it right up to the top, saving the American taxpayer billions and billions of dollars, helping our oil industry and making us even further toward that wonderful goal which we've achieved, which nobody thought was possible, of energy independence.
00:58:53.000It puts us in a position that's very strong, and we're buying it at the right price.
00:58:58.000And that's something that would have not even been possible a week ago.
00:59:06.000The price of oil went down quite a bit, so we're going to fill it up.
00:59:21.000This day should be an inspiration to every American.
00:59:25.000Because thanks to your leadership from early on, not only are we bringing a whole of government approach to confronting the coronavirus, we're bringing an all of America approach.
00:59:37.000Mr. President, from early on, you took decisive action.
00:59:40.000You suspended all travel from China, you created travel advisories in South Korea and Italy.
00:59:45.000We screened all travelers from all airports in both of those countries.
00:59:51.000And on the unanimous recommendation of your health experts, you at midnight tonight will effectively suspend all travel from Europe.
01:00:01.000And Americans that were returning will be screened and asked to voluntarily participate in a 14 day quarantine.
01:00:10.000Throughout this process, Mr. President, you put the health of America first, but you brought the best of America to address it.
01:00:19.000And it's not just at the federal level.
01:00:21.000As you said, Mr. President, we've been working with states across the country.
01:00:25.000We issued broad guidelines from CDC for every American.
01:00:29.000But this week, at your direction, we tailored specific recommendations from CDC for New York, Washington State, California, Massachusetts, and Florida.
01:00:38.000And we've been in continuous contact, as you said, with governors around the country.
01:00:42.000Mr. President, you have forged a seamless partnership with every state and every territory in this country to put the health of our nation first.
01:00:52.000But today, I trust that people around the country that are looking on at this extraordinary public and private partnership to address the issue of testing with particular inspiration.
01:01:03.000After you tapped me to lead the White House Corona Task Force, Mr. President, you said, This is all hands on deck.
01:01:10.000And you directed us to immediately reach out to the American business sector, commercial labs, to meet what we knew then would be the need for testing across the spectrum.
01:01:20.000And today, with this historic Public private partnership, we have laid the foundation to meet that need.
01:01:27.000For Americans looking on, by this Sunday evening, we'll be able to give specific guidance on when the website will be available.
01:01:35.000You can go to the website, as the President said.
01:01:37.000You'll type in your symptoms and be given direction whether or not a test is indicated.
01:01:43.000And then at the same website, you'll be directed to one of these incredible companies that are going to give a little bit of their parking lot so that people can come by and do a drive by test.
01:01:54.000President, I want to join you in thanking Walmart and CVS and Target and Walgreen.
01:01:58.000These are companies that are synonymous with communities large and small where people come together and now they're going to come together to meet the needs of the American public.
01:02:08.000These commercial laboratories, LabCorp and Quest and Roach, have just done an incredible job stepping forward and are going to literally make hundreds of thousands of tests available and being processed with results to patients in the very near future.
01:02:28.000Tasking us with bringing together not just government resources, which all state labs can now test across the country, CDC is testing, but you said, Mr. President, that we wanted to bring all the resources of the country together, and that's what this partnership really means.
01:02:42.000You know, the truth is that we have coronavirus cases now in 46 American states, and while the risk of serious illness of the coronavirus remains low, we want to encourage every American to practice common sense, practice good hygiene.
01:03:00.000Go to the CDC's website to see what the guidance is for your community or for the American people broadly.
01:03:07.000And as the President has said, it's especially important now that we look after senior citizens with chronic underlying health conditions.
01:03:15.000Last week, the President directed the Center for Medicaid and Medicare Services to raise the standards at our nursing homes, increase inspections at our nursing homes.
01:03:24.000And today we're offering very specific guidance, which Seema Verma will articulate about visitations at nursing homes.
01:03:32.000It's important to remember that they were there for us when we were growing up, Mr. President.
01:03:37.000They helped us with our homework, they tucked us in at night, they cheered us on as we pursued educations, cheered us on in our careers, and now it's time for us to be there for them.
01:03:47.000And to recognize that seniors with chronic health conditions are the most vulnerable and Americans can make a difference.
01:03:53.000So, wash your hands, use common sense, look after the most vulnerable.
01:03:58.000And, Mr. President, I know I join you in saying that every American should be proud of this incredible public private partnership that's going to be speeding access to testing to millions of Americans in the weeks ahead.
01:04:12.000And together, as you've said many times, together we'll get through this.
01:04:30.000Well, thank you to the President for the declaration.
01:04:33.000It allows my agency, CMS, that runs Medicare and Medicaid and has oversight of all of the nation's health care facilities, to suspend regulations that could get in the way of treating patients during this time.
01:04:46.000These temporary national Blanket waivers are reserved for the rarest of circumstances, and they represent a massive mobilization of our country's resources to combat this terrible virus.
01:04:58.000And the flexibilities we are offering will be a godsend to the providers, clinicians, and facilities on the front lines of this fight.
01:05:07.000And later, CMS is going to be issuing guidance directing nursing homes to temporarily restrict all visitors and non essential personnel, with a few exceptions, such as end of life situations.
01:05:21.000We fully appreciate that this measure represents a severe trial for residents of nursing homes and those who love them.
01:05:28.000But we are doing what we must to protect our vulnerable elderly.
01:05:37.000As I said in my address to the nation the other night, all Americans have a role to play in defeating this virus.
01:05:46.000Our most effective weapon right now is to limit the damage to our people and our country.
01:05:51.000And slow the spread of the virus itself.
01:05:55.000The choice we make, the precautions we put into place are critical to overcoming the virus, reducing its spread, and shortening the duration of the pandemic, which is what it is.
01:06:09.000The CDC has published guidelines on coronavirus.gov to enable its coronavirus.gov, and it's very heavily Used right now, I will say, to enable every American to respond to this epidemic and to protect themselves, their families, and their communities.
01:06:30.000While the risks to young and healthy Americans remain very low, we've learned a lot about this over the last two weeks.
01:06:38.000Anyone can be a carrier for the virus and risk transmission to older Americans and those with underlying health conditions and those who are most at risk.
01:06:52.000Older, Americans who are, especially if they have a health problem, they have not done well.
01:06:59.000We must take all precautions and be responsible for the actions that we take and that we see other people take.
01:07:08.000We want to prevent the spread and transmission of the disease.
01:07:12.000It's incredible what's happening with the sporting world, where so many of the great sports that we've gotten so used to at this time of the year, they're not going to be meeting, and they've done a great service, actually, by that.
01:07:27.000That would be another way that it could be, problems could be caused.
01:07:33.000But this is why I outlined on Wednesday night my administration's.
01:07:40.000The fact that we've issued a requirement suspending all medically unnecessary visits to various places, but in particular nursing homes.
01:07:51.000We should all be working off the same playbook when it comes to protecting Americans.
01:08:43.000For the areas where the virus is spreading, the CDC is advising communities to postpone large gatherings, postpone assemblies, social functions, and sporting events, stagger recess and lunch for schools that aren't canceled, limit in-person meetings, increase scheduled cleanings, and cancel work, sponsor travel, among numerous other steps that can be taken.
01:09:10.000Americans are the strongest and most resilient people on earth.
01:09:14.000And in the coming weeks, we will all have to make changes and sacrifices, but these short term sacrifices will produce long term gain.
01:09:24.000And again, I've said we're learning a lot for the future and future problems like this, or worse, or worse, could get worse.
01:10:18.000So much progress has already been made.
01:10:21.000And frankly, the numbers, because of steps that have been taken, are at a level that a lot of people are surprised, especially when you compare them with other places with far smaller populations.
01:10:34.000The spirit and the will of our nation is unbreakable.
01:10:37.000We will defeat this threat when America's tested America rises to the occasion.
01:10:44.000And to those families and citizens who are worried and concerned for themselves and their loved ones, I want you to know that your federal government will unleash every authority, resource, and tool at its disposal.
01:10:56.000To safeguard the lives and health of our people.
01:11:00.000So we're with you every step of the way.
01:11:02.000No nation is more prepared or more equipped to face down this crisis, as you know.
01:12:39.000Written about very widely, but we're going to be releasing a paper in about two hours stating quite a few other steps, very important ones.
01:12:52.000I wonder if you are in contact with the Brazilian President Bolsonaro after a member of his delegation who was with you Saturday was tested positive.
01:13:01.000And also, Senator, I want to ask another question if you let me.
01:13:05.000Senators Lindsey Grant and also Senator Rick Scott are self isolating.
01:13:11.000Are you planning to take any kind of precautionary measure to protect you and also your staff who was there with him?
01:14:18.000Yeah, no, I don't take responsibility at all because we were given a set of circumstances and we were given rules, regulations, and specifications from a different time.
01:14:31.000It wasn't meant for this kind of an event with the kind of numbers that we're talking about.
01:14:37.000And what we've done is redesigned it very quickly with the help of the people behind me, and we're now in very, very strong shape.
01:14:44.000I think we'll be announcing, as I said, Sunday night, and this will start very quickly.
01:14:49.000We'll have the ability to do in the millions over a very, very quick period of time.
01:14:55.000So, no, and what we have done, and we are going to be leaving a very indelible print for the future in case something like this happens again, but it was a, and that's not the fault of anybody, and frankly, the old system worked very well for smaller numbers, much smaller numbers, but not for these kind of numbers.
01:15:13.000Tony, maybe you'd like to say something.
01:15:30.000If you want to get the kind of blanket testing and availability that anybody can get it, or you could even do surveillance to find out what the penetrance is, you have to embrace the private sector.
01:15:43.000And this is exactly what you're seeing because you can't do it without it.
01:15:46.000So when I said that, I meant the system was not designed for what we need.
01:15:51.000Now, looking forward, the system will take care of it.
01:15:54.000Mr. President, and interestingly, if you go back, please, if you go back to the swine flu, Please.
01:16:34.000They had a very big failure with swine flu, a very big failure.
01:16:38.000President, I want to ask you about the European travel ban that goes into effect at midnight tonight and the exemption that you've offered to the UK.
01:16:46.000There are 17 countries that are in the so-called Schengen zone that have fewer coronavirus cases than the UK.
01:16:54.000And just in the past 24 hours, the UK has added 208 coronavirus cases to their total.
01:17:02.000Why do they, Mr. President, deserve an exemption?
01:17:05.000And would you consider adding them to this travel ban list?
01:17:08.000Well, that was recommended to me by a group of professionals, and we are looking at it based on the new numbers that are coming out, and we may have to include them in the list of countries that we will, you could say, ban or whatever it is during this period of time.
01:17:23.000But, yeah, the numbers have gone up fairly precipitously over the last 24 hours, so we may be adding that, and we may be adding a couple of others, and we may, frankly, start thinking about taking some off.
01:18:19.000In fact, we're sharing quite a bit of data, including the fact that some of our pharmaceutical companies are working over there right now with large groups of people.
01:21:15.000And that program with the Grand Princess, the ship, is continuing to be administered in the highest standards, orderly way, as the President directed.
01:21:26.000And Americans that needed treatment have received them.
01:21:30.000When I watch this, I think about this.
01:21:33.000Some of those I can't help but think of this whenever I see them together.
01:22:09.000Our Department of Homeland Security has praised them for doing that because of the unique health challenges, particularly presented to seniors with underlying conditions.
01:22:21.000We have a proposal from the cruise line industry, but they're currently considering what other steps that they might take, perhaps even similar to what those other lines have taken.
01:22:33.000We're anticipating some response on that in the next 24 hours.
01:22:38.000As the President said, the American people cherish our cruise line industry.
01:22:41.000Men and women who work on the ships, men and women who work on the shore, all the economies that are so benefited by a vibrant cruise line industry.
01:22:49.000And what the President has directed us to do is whether there is a pause in the moment, as some cruise lines are doing, and as we all continue to discuss, we want to work with the cruise line industry to ensure that when we come through this, cruise lines and the medical services that are available, and for the passengers and all of the crew that.
01:23:12.000That cruise lines are safer than ever before and can prosper for many years to come.
01:23:22.000This question is for Drs. Fauci and Burke.
01:23:25.000Dr. Fauci, based on what you currently know, what is the trajectory for when this outbreak will peak?
01:23:31.000How long will the American people have to remain on this emergency footing?
01:23:34.000And for Dr. Burke, as the administration tries to get its arms around this test kit shortage issue, the next glaring need could be respirators and related hospital equipment.
01:23:44.000So, what is the administration doing right now?
01:23:46.000To ramp up production of respirators and that kind of equipment should this outbreak persist.
01:23:53.000So, when you have an outbreak like this, particularly if you're trying to interfere with it, it's really impossible to predict the time element of when it's going to peak and when it's naturally going to go down.
01:24:04.000So, if you look at the situation where countries really did not get to the point of trying to contain and mitigate very well, you see a peak over several weeks and then down again over other several weeks.
01:24:17.000What we're trying to do with the efforts that we're doing is to blunt that peak.
01:24:22.000And I mentioned it many times, and I think it's important and appropriate for me to mention it again because it answers your question.
01:24:28.000When you talk about preventing infections from without in, which is the kind of travel restrictions we're talking about, then how do you handle what you already have in your country?
01:24:39.000You continue some sort of containment, but you also do mitigation, and you try to proportion it to the areas where there are the most infections.
01:24:47.000The success of that and how much you make this Turn into this is going to give you the amount of time.
01:25:44.000In South Korea, I want to repeat, only 4% of the tests were positive.
01:25:49.000That means 96% of the people had a different respiratory disease because we're in the middle of flu season, cold season, and all of the other.
01:25:58.000Respiratory diseases that we get every day.
01:26:01.000In LabCorp and Quest's early data, they're running about 1% to 2% positive.
01:26:06.000That means that we have a lot more other respiratory disease out there besides the coronavirus, and that's why the screening is critical.
01:26:14.000But even with the screening, we're going to run what we think are very low rates.
01:26:19.000Needless to say, though, we're taking an extraordinarily serious view of what could come.
01:26:25.000Not what Dr. Fauci talked about, blunting the I love him so much.
01:26:37.000And this emergency order and the Secretary of HHS's ability.
01:26:41.000It unlocks all of those stockpiles, those needs, what the VA has, what the DOD has, what the National Guard has, and what every hospital has.
01:26:50.000And the hospital emergency preparedness plan allows them to defer elective issues to keep those hospital beds open for those who might need it.
01:26:59.000So we're in full planning mode for each of those things.
01:27:03.000And I might add that we are in the process, and in some cases I've already done it, ordered a large number of.
01:27:39.000Can't understand a word you're saying.
01:27:41.000Well, some are making progress, some are not, as you know, but some are making progress.
01:27:44.000And as they make progress, as they get down to the number that we all think is right, that they know is right, we know is right, we'll be opening it up.
01:27:52.000And some are really moving along rapidly.
01:27:54.000We hope to be able to open things up as quickly as possible.
01:29:33.000Mr. President, the Chinese officials are expressing some tones of discontent with where the source of this virus has come from, and they're spinning some odd narratives.
01:29:47.000What are your responses to the Chinese officials who are doing that?
01:29:51.000And have they signaled any kind of resistance to upcoming trade talks in response to how we're handling this?
01:32:44.000The Stafford Act and various other things that we're involved with and have studied and memorized in so many different ways and forms.
01:32:52.000It gives the kind of power that we need to get rid of this virus.
01:32:56.000And we're going to do it very quickly.
01:32:57.000And I hope we won't need it very long, but whatever it takes.
01:33:01.000So for now, we still don't know for how long.
01:33:03.000And something very important I wanted to ask you is like, how do you think, do you really think it's essential coordinating with other countries and learning from the lessons that they are.
01:36:31.000I want to first follow up on Jeff's question because the person you were standing next to, whether you know who he is or not, tested positive for coronavirus.
01:37:40.000I'm sure we're clear, though, because we've been hearing from doctors who say, as of today, They still can't get patients tested who need a test.
01:37:55.000Well, that's been true for a while, but I'll let Mike, why don't you answer that, Mike?
01:38:02.000Well, as the President said, and Dr. Fauci has articulated, the nature of our current system where the CDC has samples sent and tests are performed, or state labs perform tests, or in some cases, university and hospital labs perform tests.
01:38:18.000Is generally adequate for an infectious disease or for people getting diagnostic work done.
01:38:26.000But given the sheer scale of this, the President tasked us with bringing together this extraordinary public and private partnership.
01:38:34.000Today, by some estimates, when you add all the labs together, and today the President made it possible for every state in the country and their state labs to authorize labs across their state to do coronavirus testing, we're estimating somewhere between 15,000 and 20,000 tests a day are able to be performed.
01:38:59.000But very soon, with the program that was announced today, Americans will be able to visit one of the sites closest to them, as described on the website, if they're symptomatic, if the questionnaire indicates it, be able to have a test there, and these incredible companies will process the test and they'll receive that information.
01:39:22.000But for now, the best advice that we can give for people is to speak to their doctor, as the President just said.
01:39:27.000And if the doctor indicates that physician, if it's not a Look at how large the frame is here.
01:39:41.000But what the president charged us with when I was tasked to take over the White House coronavirus task force was open up.
01:39:50.000I'm probably about as big as Mike Pence.
01:39:52.000The president said a few days ago that we made it clear that every American that wanted to get a test would be able clinically to get a test.
01:40:00.000Look at just the size, the robustness.
01:40:03.000He's not the tallest guy in the world, but he is tall and he's robust.
01:41:03.000And the gist of it is the national emergency, the public and private partnership.
01:41:10.000And this new testing system, which is assuages a lot of my concerns.
01:41:15.000I'm going to go a lot more into detail on this on the show tonight.
01:41:19.000The show tonight will be about this press conference and everything else happening with coronavirus.
01:41:24.000But what I've been saying for the past week is that the biggest shortcoming of this administration's response to the virus has been the lack of adequate testing capability.
01:41:37.000The volume of people that will need to be tested.
01:41:44.000We just don't have the capacity for that.
01:42:59.000You know, honestly, Trump today looks like he's tired, which is fair given the stress he's been under.
01:43:08.000But, you know, I think a lot of people have been hypercritical of the president.
01:43:12.000But in fairness, this is something which was basically unprecedented in contemporary times.
01:43:21.000And I think it snuck up on a lot of people.
01:43:23.000I don't think anybody really understood the scope and the threat of the virus really until like two weeks ago.
01:43:29.000Because we didn't see it spread in any other country outside of China until about two and a half weeks ago.
01:43:35.000That's when it really started to get bad in South Korea and started to get bad in Italy and some other places.
01:43:43.000So I think that now that it is getting bad, I think Trump is being very proactive and the measures he's announced, both economic and in terms of public health mobilization, I think they are reassuring.
01:43:56.000And time will tell how we handle this crisis.
01:43:59.000But if he's able to successfully handle the crisis, Then that's pretty huge.
01:46:25.000Weinstein's victims describe when someone you know can make or break your career and is three times your size, has you alone in a room and demands sex, how can anyone claim this as extortion?
01:46:51.000These guys will call you a simp for rejecting the liberal notion that men and women have exactly the same amount of power in the gender dynamic.
01:47:57.000That tells you everything you need to know.
01:47:59.000If you have somebody calling people incels because they don't agree with you about women, that tells you everything you need to know.
01:48:11.000There's a great article about this by Andrew Clavin, and he talks about how the word incel and the modern social status system is basically founded upon what women value.
01:48:28.000Incel is really a term that means like.
01:48:31.000And women not liking you is really not, doesn't really mean anything in the 21st century.
01:48:36.000And Andrew Clavin explains this really well, talking about how, you know, normally a woman will select a partner based on if they can protect her, if they can provide for her, you know, in other words, if they're physically strong, if they have money, you know, things like that.
01:48:50.000And he said that, or if they're virtuous.
01:48:53.000He said that in the modern era, you don't need to be protected because, you know, we don't live in a hunter gatherer society.
01:49:00.000We don't live in a society where there's like, you know, bandits and, uh, Pirates and things like that.
01:49:06.000Generally, broadly speaking, you've got police and things like that, firearms as well.
01:49:10.000And he said also women don't need to be provided for either because they've got the state, they've got welfare, right?
01:49:20.000And so he said basically what happens now because of birth control and because of these warped sort of incentives and warped things that are happening in the capitalist liberal democracy is that women's selections are really kind of arbitrary and wrong.
01:49:38.000And not really aligned with what is good for society.
01:49:42.000You know, what they prefer in a partner is really not aligned with what is, you know, eugenic or good for the country.
01:49:50.000Like, birth control, for example, makes women prefer effeminate men.
01:49:53.000If you know anything about birth control, when women are on birth control, they prefer men with softer facial features and higher pitched voices.
01:50:01.000That's like one example of some of the reasons why the mating selections are wrong.
01:50:05.000Anyway, all this is to say, signaling.
01:50:08.000For status based on success with women is not really, I mean, this is a very ignorant thing to do.
01:50:49.000You know, I say this as somebody who, you know, would have no problem with women, but obviously I'm Catholic, so I'm not a casual sex haver like James Alsop.
01:50:58.000So I guess in his mind, that has always made me, and Patrick, well, lesser extent Patrick, he's not Catholic, but that has always made me lesser in James Alsop's eyes.
01:51:08.000Even when we were feuding over the company, he called me an incel because I was saving myself for marriage.
01:51:14.000Now, for context, James Alsop is like a total man whore.
01:51:19.000And, you know, I don't want to get too personal, but he's a total man whore.
01:51:24.000So, I don't respect people that have casual sex.
01:51:27.000There's nothing about that that impresses me.
01:51:29.000There's nothing about that that, to me, you know, signifies value.
01:51:33.000There's nothing impressive about fucking whores.
01:52:00.000And, you know, the people that are impressed by that or the people that think that that's like high status, think about really what it means.
01:52:07.000Is there any shortage of whores out there?
01:52:10.000Either like literal whores, like prostitutes or just loose women?
01:54:19.000When we're talking about our deep seated societal problems that have been created by women's liberation, you know, women have been empowered, really more like emboldened.
01:54:31.000And I don't even have to tell you, everybody knows what I'm talking about the kind of behavior that goes on, the trends, and the behaviors that prevail these days.
01:54:41.000I don't have to tell you that what we hate is not women.
01:54:45.000What we hate is what's going on, obviously.
01:54:49.000But try to have a nuanced conversation about men and women, and somebody who is literally controlled by their cock and balls.
01:56:25.000If you get your dick wet and you hoe yourself around, maybe you think that makes you some kind of a Chad because you have issues with your parents or something.
01:57:46.000I mean, look, I'm not talking about every single white woman that's ever lived or that lives right now, but we all recognize there's a problem with white women.
01:58:01.000You know, and this is the problem with Wignats their idea of things is just divorced from the reality of the way things actually are.
01:58:10.000Their idea of white women as running around wheat fields and carrying baskets and in old fashioned clothes and doing these ancient European dances.
01:58:47.000My experience, and everybody I know, by the way, not just me, but everybody I know, our experience with white women, the rule, not everybody, but this is generally, this is the generality.
01:58:57.000We find that they are promiscuous, we find that they are vulgar, coarse, disrespectful, not traditional, not conservative.
01:59:05.000If anything, they're far too political, career minded, career obsessed, you might say.
01:59:11.000And it's not hating women to say that, it's not MGTOW to say that, these are just facts.
02:02:19.000He got banned from YouTube, and now he's in the TRS ghetto, and I'm sure he probably makes a fraction of the kind of money that I make, the influence that I have.
02:02:27.000We're doing conferences with Michelle Malkin in Washington, D.C. What is James doing besides struggling to pay the bills?
02:02:37.000Maybe that sounds mean-spirited, but I think that's why he has this resentment.
02:02:41.000If anything, he should feel embarrassed.
02:02:44.000If anything, he should feel embarrassed because I'm not even somebody who cares about status like that.
02:02:48.000I don't look at somebody as, oh, that person makes less than me, or, oh, that person's not as famous as me.
02:03:08.000You know, if you're going to make it about that, if you're going to take these petty pot shots behind a paywall or behind the forum or whatever, oh, okay.
02:05:06.000I'm not a douche that thinks about that.
02:05:08.000But if we want to go there, We can go there.
02:05:10.000I don't take any joy in talking like that because I think it's very materialistic to talk like that.
02:05:16.000I think it's very unbecoming, and I think it betrays your priorities.
02:05:20.000But, I mean, if we want to talk about poorly dressed, like, you know, why don't we look up a few pictures of James Alsop if we want to go there?
02:09:00.000Hating women for responding to the incentives of our society and acting in accordance is like hating a baby for crying when he's hungry or hating a tree.
02:09:07.000Well, this is really intelligent stuff, James.
02:09:13.000We solve these problems by addressing the cause, addressing those responsible for destroying gender relations, not hating those who've been victims.
02:09:50.000This is why you have, what, 52 people watching your posts, and I've had 4,500 people watching this afternoon stream, which I announced two hours ago.
02:18:35.000But as a business person, as a political actor, I'm actually quite mature.
02:18:41.000But James has this, again, this blockheadedness, this juvenile thickness, headstrong sort of, I don't know what you would call that hubris.
02:19:51.000Hello, my name is Jewish Justin Sherman, and I am a freelance producer working with CBS News Originals team on a documentary about political commentators online.
02:20:02.000We were hoping to feature Nick Fuentes in the documentary for a section about YouTube.
02:20:07.000Specifically, we are hoping to ask about gaining a following on YouTube, benefits the platform can provide, issues with the platform, voices being banned from YouTube.
02:20:45.000This is the only appropriate response.
02:20:47.000Well, and yeah, this was their documentary about.
02:20:51.000Growing my YouTube channel, gaining a following, benefits of YouTube, issues with YouTube, voices banned from YouTube.
02:20:58.000Yeah, the documentary is Extremist Next Door.
02:21:01.000In recent years, gaming and anonymous social media sites have been a breeding ground for right wing extremists populated by young white men disenchanted with their place in society.
02:21:11.000The platforms have become spaces where hatred is normalized and disaffected young people are susceptible to radicalization.
02:21:21.000And this exact same thing had happened to me with MTV.
02:21:26.000Two years ago, a little bit more than two years ago, the same thing happened.
02:21:31.000MTV reached out to me in like fall 2017, and in February 2018, they came to my house for a week and shot an episode of what they told me was MTV True Life.
02:21:41.000And then when the Groyper Wars happened four months ago, they published their footage for the first time ever under the title, like, you know, I forget what it even was, but it was about like Nazis and right wing extremism.
02:21:55.000So that had just happened to me when CBS reached out, and they did the exact same thing.
02:22:01.000Set up, they lie about the premise, they take the footage, and then they repackage it as Extremist Next Door.
02:25:52.000So we're heading out to meet a guy we've been chatting to online in one of these online forums that attracts gamers and attracts people in various hate groups.
02:26:05.000And we're approaching a little cautiously, a little nervously.
02:26:10.000Because a lot of the people that we talk to on these forums despise the media.
02:26:16.000It's sort of a wonder that he was even willing to.
02:30:52.000Then, 20 years old, I got into 4chan and I got introduced to a whole variety of different views, different ideas that I've never seen or heard of before.
02:31:06.000I should add, by the way, that I am being sarcastic when I say that.
02:31:09.000There is a legitimate subculture on the internet of people that are like.
02:31:52.000Chen is a controversial image board known for its anonymity and limited censorship, which has made it the home for some of the internet's most extreme content.
02:32:01.000There's pornography, there's gore, you know, a lot of really extreme speech, really extreme content.
02:32:08.000The site is made up of a variety of boards, each one representing a different time.
02:32:12.000Oh, and also, when he says there's really gore, there's porn, there's extreme content, they are prodding you as well.
02:33:10.000At that point, I wasn't doing well, not that I wasn't doing well, but I hadn't monetized my business to the extent that I've monetized it since.
02:33:18.000But to be an 18 year old who's dropped out of college that doesn't own your own car, I don't know many 18 year olds who are in college that own their own car.
02:33:27.000I don't know many 18 year olds that work that own their own car and are moved out and everything.
02:33:32.000But in any case, we were driving and he's like, Yeah, so is this your car?
02:33:36.000And I said, Well, you know, technically it's my dad's, but I've been driving this since high school and I think I'm going to buy it from him and so on.
02:33:42.000And he told me, Well, this is what they kept telling me throughout the week is what they do in the documentary is they subtract the interviewer.
02:34:08.000Well, if they're recording that for an interview on a television show and the interviewer won't actually be in the shot, they won't be in the show, and their question won't be recorded and put in the show, well, then you just saying the word red isn't usable.
02:34:24.000You would have to say, if they ask you, what's your favorite color, you would have to say, well, my favorite color is red.
02:34:29.000And that way, when they just take your half of the interview and they put it in the show, then it's coherent.
02:35:11.000I always say, no, I don't think I'm going to say that.
02:35:13.000I think I'm going to say it like this.
02:35:15.000And it was funny because we would kind of go back and forth and it would be these terse sort of exchanges where he would be asking me to rephrase it in a certain way and I would rephrase it in a way that would benefit me.
02:35:26.000At the time, this was when the Parkland shooting happened when they were filming this MTV documentary.
02:35:37.000And I don't know if you remember, but at the time, in the first.
02:35:40.000Maybe 12 hours after the Parkland shooting, this obscure militia in Florida took credit for it.
02:37:55.000I'm just telling you from my experience, these are the ways that they distort.
02:38:00.000And so, you know, maybe he is just showing that off.
02:38:02.000But probably most likely, you've got these very shady tactics that are being used by the interviewer that I've been subject to many, many times.
02:38:11.000So I want to clarify I have no idea who this guy is.
02:38:14.000I don't know if he's on board with us.
02:38:16.000I've never heard of this wizard Chan, so I don't know.
02:38:33.000I'm simply saying, I'm analyzing it from the perspective of somebody who has been the subject of a hijab and just explaining these practices.
02:38:53.000I would post comments, I would post replies to people commenting and say that that's bad.
02:38:58.000Within a year, I was saying it, though.
02:39:00.000Then I noticed that they have the politics board.
02:39:03.000And me being already into politics, I went right into that one.
02:39:08.0004chan's politically incorrect board, also known as POL, was created for the discussion of news, world events, and political issues, according to its moderators.
02:39:17.000But it has become well known for fostering hate speech, racism, and anti Semitism.
02:39:22.000I've become tolerant of that you would not tolerate.
02:39:28.000I never imagined myself having the views that I do when I was an Obama supporter.
02:40:17.000They did use a lot of those techniques against me, but this guy is clearly a Fed or some kind of controlled opposition, or he's just an idiot, or he's just a fucking idiot.
02:40:27.000But in any case, maybe they didn't even have to trick this guy.
02:43:02.000Are terms for far right nationalist movements that have thrived online by spreading extremist propaganda targeted to disaffected young men.
02:43:09.000Violent clashes broke out this weekend in Portland, Oregon.
02:43:13.000In February, the FBI elevated the threat of domestic racially motivated violent extremists to a national threat priority.
02:43:21.000We've now been monitoring this for the last four years, and people are simply just engaging with this content online at higher rates.
02:43:28.000You just have to know, by the way, you just have to know that anytime the media talks to you, They are going to play this.
02:43:38.000Every time for the rest of our lives that the media talks about nationalism, right wing people, right wing people on the internet, anytime that you end up in a documentary, TV spot, whatever, this will be in there no matter what.
02:43:54.000It doesn't matter who you are, it doesn't matter what you say.
02:43:58.000Even in print, Jaden McNeil knows this.
02:44:00.000Jaden McNeil starts America First Students at Kansas State.
02:44:13.000This was the picture they used alongside the headline, talking about America First Students.
02:44:18.000It's like no matter what, no matter who you are, what you say, what you are, even if you don't talk to the media, this is what they will use for the rest of our lives.
02:45:28.000This model is just so tired of everything about this documentary from the typing in the dark, fast paced typing in the dark, cyber techno music, the shot in the car, you know, oh, well.
02:45:44.000I'm driving up to the house and I'm focused on driving and don't really know what to expect.
02:47:32.000Of a meme that's about time travelers killing Hitler.
02:47:36.000But this one, time traveler was tipping off Hitler about the invasion of Normandy.
02:47:41.000That's when I realized this is all propaganda.
02:47:44.000Joanna Schroeder is a writer and mom to two young boys who she says were being exposed to far right propaganda and hate speech on mainstream online platforms.
02:48:16.000When they first started playing video games online with people from around the world, because I would hear homophobic slurs or racial slurs.
02:48:26.000So, when you're playing video games or if you're going on YouTube and looking up games, do you see.
02:50:33.000He's contemplating being a teen journalist.
02:50:35.000Schroeder posted a Twitter thread urging parents of boys to monitor the content their sons were being exposed to online.
02:50:41.000Had you not intervened, do you worry that your sons could have begun to subscribe to alt right beliefs?
02:50:51.000I certainly do not think my kids would have ever become neo Nazis or white supremacists.
02:50:56.000But I do believe that they would have participated in a system, online especially, that normalized hate like racism and homophobia unwittingly.
02:51:08.000They look for the most vulnerable among our boys.
02:51:11.000And then what they do is they tap into this very natural sort of anger that comes up within adolescents and the feeling of isolation that so many kids, even the healthiest, happiest kids, often experience.
02:51:31.000I like, by the way, I would like to add because we hear this narrative all the time about preying on vulnerable young people.
02:51:40.000It's never preying on vulnerable young people when you're getting these kids involved in the right thing.
02:51:46.000You know, taking your kid to a pussy hat march, that's fine, right?
02:51:50.000That's not radicalizing, that's not taking advantage, that's not exploitative, that's natural, that's getting them involved, that's exposing them to new ideas, that's the political process.
02:52:02.000You know, Getting them to become militant climate activists or abortion activists or gay rights activists or whatever.
02:52:23.000And I will also add, beyond that, because that's not a perfect analogy, I will also add that when young men are getting hooked on pornography, Well, there's no documentary about that.
02:52:35.000Nobody really gives a shit about that.
02:52:37.000There's no vice documentary about, you know, scaremongering about children being exposed to pornography when they're 13 years old, right?
02:57:02.000Into these movements, it's easy to think, oh, right, maybe they just saw a piece of content and that convinced them.
02:57:07.000That's usually not what gets people into this.
02:57:09.000It's usually that they're seeking a community, they're seeking some sense of belonging, and these groups and movements provide them that, even online.
02:58:21.000In March of 2019, He posted a video on YouTube called My Descent into the Alt Right Pipeline, where he detailed how prominent content creators and YouTube's recommendation algorithm radicalized him over a five year period.
02:58:35.000I was at a terrible point in my life, and I was actively looking for something or someone to fix that.
02:58:43.000And I just spent all my time on the internet.
02:58:45.000I felt like I was part of a larger community and a larger movement because you had all these memes, and you would see people posting things on the internet.
02:58:52.000You would see all the songs they'd make or the videos they'd make.
02:58:55.000And you really felt like you were part of something.
02:58:58.000I was watching all types of stuff in the realm of self help and neuroscience and psychology, but it ended up recommending to me a video by Stefan Molyneux.
02:59:06.000As soon as I found Stef's videos, it just clicked with me.
02:59:09.000I want to get that face off the screen.
02:59:46.000He would interview people, and then also, and I'd go watch their content.
02:59:50.000And then also, the recommendation algorithm would recommend content that was similar.
02:59:55.000And it always seemed to take me deeper.
02:59:58.000So, I went from being a libertarian to being a conservative.
03:00:01.000And then I was like, at the very end, drifting into white nationalism, which was strange because I was always like a liberal progressive growing up.
03:00:07.000You know, I watched Jon Stewart and Michael Moore documentaries, and he painted this picture to me that the left was destroying the world.
03:00:14.000But when you go online, you're getting your perspective fed back to you over and over and over again.
03:00:20.000And if you don't look outside of that bubble, then it's going to start to shape the way you see everything.
03:00:28.000We reached out to Stefan Molyneux but never heard back, so we began reaching out to other prominent far right YouTubers.
03:01:57.000Our interview requests to their followers and were then bombarded by a lot of their followers urging them not to talk to us.
03:02:07.000After And set off a bit of a firestorm.
03:02:10.000The YouTubers began to tweet out our interview requests to their followers and were then bombarded by a lot of their followers urging them not to talk to us.
03:02:23.000After my producer's email was posted, he began receiving a number of emails from the YouTuber's supporters.
03:04:28.000After rejections from more than a dozen prominent far right YouTubers, we were able to sit down with French Canadian neuroscientist Jean Francois Garripe, known as JF by his followers.
03:05:05.000From more than a dozen prominent far right YouTubers, we were able to sit down with French Canadian neuroscientist Jean Francois Garripe, known as JF by his followers.
03:05:34.000JF's YouTube page is classified as a white nationalist channel by the Anti Defamation League and often features far right guests such as Richard Spencer and David Duke.
03:05:44.000So, my goal is to produce good media that people enjoy.
03:05:48.000To me, what I want to create is an experience in people's brains.
03:06:04.000There's lots of people who are feeling that our societies are becoming increasingly hostile to white interests, to male interests.
03:06:14.000When you talk about hostility towards white people, when you talk about hostility towards men and boys, the characterization is oh, you're anti woman, you're anti race, you know, you're racist, you're anti Semitic.
03:07:10.000What determines how much money I make is how much of my audience is willing to pay $5 tonight for what I'm going to say.
03:07:20.000And so my incentives are all into satisfying people and providing them with a view that they wouldn't hear elsewhere.
03:07:28.000Do you worry that there are prominent voices online who peddle outrage because there's money to be made and that they could be creating?
03:07:39.000The next incident, the next violent incident?
03:07:43.000Well, I think that there could be such voices, but I'm not sure that scientifically we've reached a case that violent incidents were caused by speech.
03:07:55.000On the other hand, there are more underground websites that may be seen as cultures favoring violence, and Fortune is one of them.
03:08:03.000Do you ever get nervous about some of the people who come onto your site?
03:08:08.000That they could be dangerous or they could be too extreme?
03:08:15.000There can be people who are intending violence and want to use my movement and grab the flag and say, I did it for JF.
03:08:25.000I'm making it clear publicly that I'm not for violence and that if you do that kind of stuff, it's not only going to hurt you, you're going to end up in jail, but you're going to hurt other people and our movement.
03:08:40.000I think what we see is that some kind of hatred.
03:08:46.000Unfortunately, I think we're already seeing where it may lead.
03:08:49.000We've seen more and more instances in the last few years, I would say, of people openly expressing hatred towards others.
03:08:58.000This is something that is also what compels some young people to take action, you know, and unfortunately violent action.
03:09:06.000Over the last five years, there has been a 320% rise in far right terrorist attacks throughout the Western world, according to the Global Terrorism Index.
03:11:02.000It's you people out here in the society that are treating, you know, that are putting us out as outcasts, that are putting us to the side, throwing us under the bus, throwing us in the trash can, and that allows for this kind of thing to happen.
03:13:12.000To be airing this vitriolic language in a relatively public space where you can shine the light on it rather than this happening in some dark corner of the world unbeknownst to us.
03:13:30.000That's absolutely my take on this issue.
03:13:32.000You know, every person who puts this information into the public domain, they're essentially leaving us a digital footprint.
03:13:38.000They're telling us exactly the path they're taking.
03:13:40.000In many cases, they're even showing us their kind of radicalization over the years.
03:13:45.000They're giving us a huge amount of information to help understand them, but not just to understand them, also to intervene.
03:13:56.000The Pair of the Hate provides an opportunity to examine how hate escalates in our world.
03:14:02.000These are swastikas being etched into bathroom doors.
03:14:05.000Is there anybody else who's seen anything like that in their community?
03:14:46.000When it does happen, it's subconscious to you, like we don't notice it anymore.
03:14:50.000If it's been exposed to you frequently, you kind of get used to it and you kind of become something where, like, it's normal at that point and no longer seem as something offensive.
03:15:00.000So, what are you doing by sharing something on social media that is off-colored or inappropriate or stereotypical or hateful?
03:15:10.000And what happens when something goes unchecked?
03:15:13.000Having that speech go unchecked online makes them feel like they have the right to do it in real life.
03:15:21.000We're really trying to show them how the hate escalates.
03:15:52.000And really, what happens when hate and bias go unchecked because there is nobody who is immune to the effects of what social media, what online activity, what the internet can do.
03:16:06.000These hateful ideas can seep into certainly into high school.
03:16:09.000There are steps we need to be taking now to address this.
03:16:14.000But I think parents have to play a role in terms of understanding what their kids are seeing online, what these Ideas really mean what they lead to, and make sure they're talking about these things.
03:16:28.000Extreme ideologies and hate speech were not born on the internet, but online communities known for emboldening users and normalizing vitriolic discourse have made it more accessible than ever before.
03:16:48.000There's a lot of misconceptions about what's going on online, and I wanted to kind of clear up a lot of those misconceptions.
03:16:54.000So I kind of want to help set that record straight.
03:16:57.000Are you at all afraid of what the repercussions might be on you?
03:17:01.000I don't really have much to lose in my life at this point.
03:17:04.000I, you know, of course, we live in an age where, you know, things could go viral and stuff like that, but I don't really think about that anymore.