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https://www.pupia.tv - USA - President Trump Signs Executive Orders (30.09.25)
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03:32e la Maha Commission.
03:35Abbiamo aumentato l'investimento,
03:37aggiungi un'altra 50 milioni
03:38per l'initiativa di Childhood Cancer Data Initiative.
03:41Abbiamo fatto questo immediatamente.
03:43Abbiamo un po' di investimento con le tarifte.
03:45Abbiamo mai avuto un po' di investimento come in.
03:48Abbiamo un paio ricco di nuovo.
03:50Abbiamo un paio di un paio un anno fa,
03:51e ora siamo riusciti.
03:53Abbiamo un paio.
03:55Abbiamo un paio.
03:56Abbiamo un paio di un paio.
03:58È un paio di fare questo,
03:59in un paio di tutti voi fare questo.
04:01Ok?
04:01In questo modo,
04:02I'm also directing the federal government
04:04to fully utilize artificial intelligence
04:06to supercharge pediatric cancer research.
04:10It's pretty amazing what's happening.
04:12For years, we've been amassing data
04:14about childhood cancer,
04:15but until now,
04:16we've been unable to fully exploit
04:18this trove of information
04:20and apply it to practical medicine.
04:24Using cutting-edge AI,
04:25we will empower scientists and researchers
04:28to discover new treatments,
04:29scures and prevention strategies.
04:32AI can also make ground-breaking trials
04:34and therapies.
04:35And it's just going to be so accessible
04:38to everybody,
04:38families all across the country.
04:41So it's going to be amazing.
04:43What's happening is amazing.
04:44And we have more AI.
04:45We're leading in AI.
04:46We're leading China by a lot.
04:48We're leading everybody by a lot.
04:50They're creating their own energy.
04:51We let them build their own energy plant
04:53because we don't have the energy.
04:55Nobody does to feed them.
04:59The amount of energy just the AI needs
05:02coming into this country
05:03is double what we have right now.
05:04So we're letting them go out
05:06and create their own energy plants
05:09and their own electricity.
05:11And they're doing it.
05:12We're giving them permits
05:13to build electric plants.
05:15They're becoming sort of a utility.
05:17Maybe they'll do better
05:18with being a utility.
05:19Who knows?
05:19They'll do better with being a utility
05:21than they will being AI.
05:23What do you think of the chances
05:24that they...
05:25I hope I'm wrong about that
05:26or they made a bad bet, right?
05:28So anyway,
05:29but I want to just say
05:32that we're going to defeat
05:33childhood cancer once and for all.
05:35And I'd like to ask Stephanie
05:36to say a few words.
05:38She's a very special person
05:39and very, very much involved in this.
05:43Thank you very much, Seth.
05:45Good.
05:46My mother is making me stupid.
05:47That's right.
05:48She'll do this.
05:49My mother.
05:50Well, Mr. President,
05:51thank you very much.
05:52You've already acknowledged
05:53this incredible team here
05:55and all of these people
05:57standing behind me
05:58were inspired by the story
05:59of a little boy
06:00named Connor Mihalik.
06:02He was a little boy
06:03who didn't want to hug me
06:04because he gave choke-out hugs.
06:06He booed his favorite nurse
06:07when she came to give his chemo
06:09and he always worried about his dad
06:11because his dad
06:12was Connor's best friend.
06:14Connor was a WWE fan
06:16who I met after one of our big events,
06:18the Royal Rumble.
06:19You could tell he was sick.
06:20He had a big scar
06:22that was running up the back
06:23of his neck
06:23and a lump on his head
06:24but you would never know it
06:26from his personality.
06:28He told me about the t-shirt
06:29that he was wearing
06:30that was dragging on the ground
06:32because WWE superstar Sheamus,
06:34who's 6'5",
06:35had given it to him.
06:37Underneath that
06:37was his Daniel Bryan t-shirt
06:39and underneath that
06:40was his Skylanders t-shirt
06:42because that was his favorite toy.
06:44And as I stood up
06:45from my aforementioned choke-out hug,
06:47Connor's dad told me
06:48that he didn't have long to live.
06:51And I didn't want to believe that.
06:54I kissed him goodbye
06:55on his soft little cheek
06:56and when he looked back at me,
06:59I made an unspoken promise
07:00to fight for him
07:02and kids just like him.
07:05Kids shouldn't even know
07:06what cancer is,
07:08let alone have to face it.
07:10And this incredible team
07:11believes that too.
07:13This executive order
07:15makes kids with cancer
07:17the first focus
07:18of AI innovation
07:20across healthcare in America.
07:22If there is one thing
07:24in the world
07:25that could bring us together,
07:27please let it be our children.
07:30Because I can almost guarantee
07:32if your child
07:33was diagnosed with cancer,
07:35you wouldn't care
07:36what party their doctor belonged to.
07:38You would just want the best.
07:40and President Trump
07:42is doing just that,
07:44enabling that every child
07:46with cancer
07:46gets the best care possible.
07:49And we couldn't be more grateful.
07:51Thank you, sir.
07:52Thank you, sir.
07:52Great job.
07:52Thank you very much.
07:54She's done that before,
07:55hasn't she?
07:56Great job.
07:57Bobby, please.
07:59Today, President Trump
08:01signed an executive order
08:02that makes an historic promise.
08:04We will harness America's
08:05innovation
08:06in artificial intelligence
08:08to find cures
08:09for pediatric cancer.
08:11We stand here today
08:13because of Stephanie McMahon-Levesque
08:15who never wavered
08:16in her 11-year commitment
08:18to give every child
08:20a future free of cancer.
08:22She proves how one person's courage
08:24can change what is possible.
08:27Cancer is now the leading cause
08:29of chronic disease-related death
08:31in children.
08:32And its incident
08:32has risen by more than 40%
08:35since 1975.
08:36We cannot accept that.
08:38We must act with urgency.
08:41The Maha Strategy Report
08:43released earlier this month
08:44directs HHS to focus on research
08:47that harnesses AI
08:48to uncovered causes,
08:51identify risks early,
08:52and take action in childhood
08:54and young adulthood
08:55to prevent cancer.
08:57Now, this executive order
08:58directs the Maha Commission,
09:00working with our nation's
09:01top science and technology leaders
09:04to deploy AI
09:06to transform cancer care
09:08and research.
09:09We will accelerate progress
09:11in the Childhood Cancer Data Initiative
09:13that President Trump launched
09:14in 2019,
09:17and that means building
09:18stronger data systems,
09:20using AI to decode complex biology,
09:24designing better clinical trials
09:25that deliver faster,
09:27more effective treatment for kids.
09:29The order doubles federal investment
09:32in the Child Cancer Data Initiative
09:34with an additional $50 million
09:37just this year.
09:39NIH will expand research
09:41while the private sector
09:42and universities
09:43will bring their best tools
09:44to the table.
09:46Together, we will ensure
09:47that every innovation,
09:48every breakthrough,
09:49goes to work for our children.
09:50The order guarantees
09:55that AI will be integrated
09:57into HHS interoperability networks.
10:00We will make electronic health records
10:02and claims data work
10:04for patients and researchers.
10:06We're already doing that,
10:07and always with parents
10:08in control
10:09of their child's health information.
10:11No family should have to fight cancer
10:14without data tools
10:15or without access
10:16to the very best science.
10:18Are too long families
10:19have fought childhood cancer
10:21while our systems lag behind.
10:23President Trump,
10:24thank you for your leadership
10:25in changing all that.
10:28This executive order
10:29is about action,
10:30unlocking cures,
10:32empowering families,
10:33and giving every child
10:34the chance to grow up
10:36healthy and strong.
10:38With American innovation
10:39and leadership,
10:40we can make our children
10:41healthy again.
10:43Bobby, do they know
10:44why there's quite an increase
10:47that's taken place
10:48over the last number of years?
10:49Do they know why that,
10:51do they have any idea
10:52why that's happened?
10:52We are doing that research,
10:54and Jay Bhattacharya can talk
10:55about that.
10:56We're doing that research
10:57now for the first time.
10:59We're focusing on that,
11:01in particular colon cancers
11:02and these cancers
11:03that have suddenly,
11:04that never affected children
11:05before,
11:07and suddenly are epidemic
11:09in our children,
11:10and we're going to find
11:10the causes,
11:11their environmental causes,
11:14we're going to identify them
11:15and work to eliminate them.
11:16Good, thanks.
11:17Thanks, Bobby.
11:17Jay, go ahead, please.
11:19Hello, thank you, everyone.
11:20Thank you, President Trump,
11:21for signing this historic
11:22executive order
11:23directing your administration
11:24to use advanced artificial
11:26intelligence technologies
11:27to cure childhood cancer.
11:29By signing this executive order,
11:30the administration
11:31is advancing the NIH
11:32childhood cancer data initiatives,
11:34coordinated pediatric,
11:36adolescent,
11:36and young adult rare cancer,
11:38first launched
11:39under President Trump's direction
11:40in 2019.
11:40When I was a young medical student
11:43in the 1990s,
11:44I had the privilege
11:44of spending a month
11:46in a pediatric cancer ward
11:47treating children with cancer,
11:50and I have to say
11:51it was the most difficult
11:51month of my life.
11:52I left for home
11:53every day in tears.
11:55Watching little children
11:56cope with a deadly disease
11:57is hard.
11:58They should be playing
11:59with their friends,
12:00going to school,
12:01living their best lives,
12:02but instead,
12:03they bravely face cancer.
12:05These are the bravest kids
12:06I've ever met.
12:08I have tremendous admiration
12:09for the scientists
12:10who devote their lives
12:11to finding cures
12:12for kids with cancer,
12:13the doctors and nurses
12:14who take care of them,
12:15and for their parents
12:16who suffer alongside them,
12:18care for them,
12:19and love them.
12:20This year,
12:21nearly 9,500 children
12:22will be diagnosed
12:23with cancer in the U.S.
12:24In the mid-1970s,
12:26the five-year survival
12:27for cancer was 58%.
12:29Today, the cancer survival rate
12:32for children with cancer
12:32is 85%.
12:33This is because
12:35of the tremendous investments
12:36we've made
12:37in treating childhood cancer
12:38and researching it,
12:39and it's worth
12:40celebrating this achievement,
12:41but I say that 85%
12:43is still too low.
12:44We need to be at 100%.
12:46We still have a long way to go.
12:48The treatments
12:49these little kids undergo
12:50involve therapies
12:51like chemo or radiation
12:52that put them through hell.
12:54Even with 85%
12:55will be cured,
12:56the therapies themselves
12:56can cause health problems
12:57as kids age into adulthood.
12:59Nearly 60% of cancer survivors
13:01experience severe,
13:03life-threatening complications
13:03in adulthood
13:04because of these treatments,
13:06and so we need better treatments
13:08so that we can raise
13:09the survival rate
13:10and reduce the side effects.
13:12This initiative builds
13:13on the CCDI's mission
13:16to gather data
13:16from every child,
13:17adolescent,
13:18and young adult
13:18diagnosed with cancer
13:19no matter where
13:20they receive care.
13:21It aims to develop
13:21a platform and tools
13:22to bring together
13:23clinical care,
13:24research tools
13:25like molecular characterization
13:26and genetic information,
13:28tools that will improve
13:29preventive measures,
13:29treatment,
13:30quality of life,
13:31survival for childhood cancer.
13:32By uniting families,
13:34clinicians,
13:34and researchers
13:35by harnessing the power of AI,
13:37CCDI will accelerate diagnosis,
13:39inform treatment,
13:39and develop the next generation
13:40of life-saving therapies.
13:43This is not about
13:44collecting data alone.
13:45It's about giving families hope.
13:47Today, we commit to taking this work
13:49to the next level.
13:50With the executive order
13:51that President Trump is signing,
13:52we're building a future
13:53where every child's data
13:54contributes to faster diagnosis.
13:56Artificial intelligence
13:57will help us uncover
13:57faster, more precise treatments,
13:59improve quality of life,
14:00and better survival.
14:02And finally,
14:02let me extend
14:03my sincere congratulations
14:05and gratitude
14:05to President Trump
14:06for his leadership and vision
14:07in giving us this opportunity
14:08to make America healthy again,
14:10to rigorously push
14:11the boundary of science
14:12and bring hope
14:13to millions of families.
14:14Thank you.
14:14Thank you very much, Jack.
14:15It's very nice.
14:16Appreciate it.
14:18Director Crencius, please.
14:20Thank you, Mr. President,
14:21and thank you,
14:22Secretary Kennedy,
14:23for your leadership
14:23on this issue.
14:25I am thrilled
14:25that our Maha strategy
14:28prioritizes utilizing AI
14:29in the fight against cancer,
14:31and that this executive order
14:33is putting a priority
14:34to this action.
14:35Thank you for your commitment,
14:36Mr. President,
14:37to the United States
14:38for maintaining
14:39its global leadership
14:39in artificial intelligence
14:41across models,
14:42data sets,
14:43applications,
14:44and to issue
14:45an AI action plan
14:46to do just that.
14:48Your foresight
14:49in the first term,
14:50leading you to establish
14:51the CCDI
14:52to gather,
14:53harness,
14:54and share data
14:54on childhood cancers,
14:56has positioned us today
14:57to leverage AI
14:58in a way
14:59we could never imagine before.
15:00With America's
15:01pioneering models,
15:02American researchers
15:03now have the best tools
15:04in the world
15:05to turn the CCDI data
15:07into the building blocks
15:09of life-changing breakthroughs.
15:11So I and my team
15:12at OSTP
15:12are thrilled
15:13to partner
15:13with our teams
15:14at HHS
15:15and NIH
15:15and with David
15:16to empower
15:17the development
15:18of gold standard applications
15:19for the pediatric
15:20cancer research
15:21and to play
15:22our very small part
15:23in trying to protect
15:24the health and happiness
15:25of America's children.
15:26Thank you very much,
15:26Mr. President.
15:28David, please.
15:29Thank you, sir.
15:30Well, first of all,
15:30I just want to thank
15:31Stephanie McMahon
15:32and all of us
15:33for helping to bring
15:34us all together here.
15:35You know, for years,
15:36they've played villains
15:37on TV,
15:38but they're actually
15:39very nice people
15:39in real life.
15:41But it's because
15:42of your passion
15:43that we're all here today,
15:44so thank you for that.
15:45And thank you,
15:45Mr. President,
15:46for your leadership
15:46on this.
15:47First of all,
15:48you did have the foresight
15:49to create this
15:50childhood cancer database
15:51way back in 2019,
15:53and that's what's
15:54going to power
15:54that AI is going
15:55to give us the data
15:56to find all the patterns in.
15:58The other thing
15:58you've done is
15:59you've made it
16:00your policy
16:00of this administration
16:01to support innovation,
16:02to support infrastructure,
16:03to support energy.
16:05And because of that,
16:05we have an AI boom
16:06going on right now,
16:074.8% growth rate
16:08in the last quarter
16:09in GDP,
16:10and a big part of that
16:11is because of the AI boom
16:12that you've unleashed.
16:13So thank you, sir,
16:14for doing that.
16:15And I think that we can see
16:16today that this AI boom
16:17is not just going to be
16:18about dollars and cents,
16:19but about saving lives
16:20as well.
16:21We're going to get
16:21some miraculous cures
16:22out of this.
16:23so thank you
16:24to everyone
16:25who's here today.
16:25Thank you very much.
16:26Good job.
16:27We just had a meeting,
16:28and Oz was at the meeting
16:29and really was a dominant
16:31factor along with Bobby,
16:33and maybe you could just
16:34say a couple of words
16:35about our past meeting
16:37where we're going to be
16:37lowering drug prices
16:38by 50, 100, 200,
16:41even 500 percent,
16:42even 1,000.
16:43We have 1,000 percent also.
16:45We have one coming up next week,
16:47a big one,
16:481,000 percent reduction in price.
16:50Do you want to give
16:51just a couple of words
16:52on that, Oz?
16:53It's a historic day.
16:54For the first time,
16:56we've had the magnitude
16:57of give from the
16:59pharmaceutical industry.
17:00One of their leading lights,
17:02Alfred Bulla,
17:02and his company,
17:03Pfizer, agreed.
17:04It's something the President
17:05has been pushing on
17:06since his first term
17:07and has been calling me
17:08quite frequently
17:08a speed dial over this term
17:10to make sure that
17:11Secretary Kennedy and I
17:12would seriously
17:13engage industry.
17:15They have agreed
17:15to several important concessions.
17:18First, we will have
17:19most favored nation
17:20drug pricing in this country
17:22for everyone on Medicaid.
17:24So our most vulnerable
17:24populations will not be forced
17:26to pay three times or more,
17:27five, six, seven times more
17:29for the exact same pills
17:30and the same bottles
17:31as it costs
17:32in other countries.
17:33That will make it
17:33a lot easier for governors
17:35to manage their budgets
17:36and shows, again,
17:38a distinct passion
17:40that the President
17:41has for helping people
17:43who are most vulnerable.
17:44We've also gotten
17:45all new drugs
17:46to be released in this country
17:47to be priced
17:48at most favored nation,
17:49which means by the end
17:50of the President's term,
17:5295% of all pharmaceutical drugs
17:54in America
17:54will be at most favored nation pricing.
17:57Again, no more discrepancies
17:58between what folks
17:59in other countries
18:00can buy their drugs for
18:01and what's being purchased
18:02in this country.
18:03Pfizer also agreed,
18:05as will companies next week
18:06when they come to visit
18:07this same White House,
18:09to onshore drugs
18:11to bring their production
18:12back into America
18:13so American workers
18:14will benefit as well.
18:15But at the same time,
18:16this is critical.
18:17It allowed Pfizer
18:18and we believe
18:19for other pharmaceutical companies
18:21to maintain
18:21their innovative edge.
18:23We want America
18:23to continue to find cures
18:24like the ones
18:25that saved the lives
18:26of some of the children
18:27that I'm looking at right now.
18:28Those beautiful faces
18:29and smiles are here
18:30because American innovation
18:31was not dulled,
18:33not blunted,
18:34but we can solve that need
18:36and thread the needle
18:36by also making
18:37healthcare affordable
18:38so Americans no longer,
18:40including children like this,
18:41be forced to make
18:42a difficult choice
18:44between groceries
18:44and pharmaceuticals.
18:46And I must say,
18:47Mr. President,
18:47since this morning,
18:48if you just look
18:48at the stock market,
18:49there's been support
18:50of this decision
18:51made by the CEO of Pfizer.
18:54Their stock has benefited.
18:55So I think
18:55it was the right thing
18:56for the company,
18:57the right thing
18:57for the policies
18:59of this administration,
19:01which is a pretty cool
19:01place to work,
19:02but most importantly,
19:03it's the right thing
19:04for the American people.
19:05Thank you very much.
19:06and maybe we'll just
19:07finish it off with Linda
19:08because she's been
19:09such an incredible
19:10cabinet member
19:12and done such a good job.
19:14Maybe you want
19:14to say something
19:15about your unbelievable
19:17daughter and son-in-law
19:18because they've worked
19:19very hard on this.
19:20Well, thank you,
19:20Mr. President,
19:21for the opportunity
19:22to do that.
19:23I don't think that,
19:24you know,
19:26any mother could be
19:27any more proud
19:27of all of the efforts
19:29that Stephanie's made
19:30in support also of Paul.
19:32Stephanie first
19:33talked about this
19:3410 or 11 years ago
19:35after little Connor
19:36and I remember
19:37one of the things
19:38that she said to me
19:39was I really would
19:40like to somehow
19:42convene the people
19:45and the scientists
19:46who think outside
19:48of the box
19:49because research is done
19:51in very standard terms.
19:52You do this,
19:53you do this,
19:53and yes,
19:54you have to do that.
19:55But she said,
19:56I really would like
19:57to tap into some
19:58of the most creative
19:59and inventive minds
20:00in the country
20:01to be able to look
20:03at research differently
20:04for pediatric cancer.
20:06And she did that.
20:07Took her about 10 years
20:08and she kept tapping in
20:10and calling people
20:10and being pretty relentless
20:11about it.
20:13Driven herself
20:14by a mother's heart.
20:15And I couldn't be
20:16any more proud
20:17of the work she's done.
20:18I'm happy to stand by
20:19and be a supportive mom
20:21and be very proud
20:22of her today.
20:23Thanks.
20:24Good job you're doing.
20:25Thank you very much, Linda.
20:26Okay, any questions, please?
20:28Mr. President,
20:30as we inch closer
20:31to a government shutdown
20:32this morning,
20:33you said you might do
20:34a lot of layoffs.
20:36If Doge is already reducing
20:38the federal workforce,
20:39why is it necessary
20:40to link more federal jobs
20:42cut to a shutdown?
20:44Well, the Democrats
20:45want to shut it down.
20:46So when you shut it down,
20:47you have to do layoffs.
20:48So we'd be laying off
20:49a lot of people
20:50that are going
20:51to be very affected.
20:52And the Democrats,
20:53they're going
20:53to be Democrats.
20:54as you know,
20:56we, this country,
20:57no country can afford
20:57to pay for illegal
20:59immigration, health care
21:00for everybody
21:01that comes into the country.
21:02And that's what
21:03they're insisting.
21:04And obviously,
21:05I have an obligation
21:05to not accept that.
21:07That would affect everybody.
21:09You know, when I see
21:10what we're doing with AI
21:11and all the plants
21:11that are opening up
21:12in the country,
21:13$17 trillion is coming.
21:15And if you compare
21:16that to Biden,
21:17Biden had,
21:18in four years,
21:19less than a trillion.
21:20We have $17 trillion,
21:21more than that.
21:22I think it's going to be
21:23much more than that, David.
21:24by the end of this year.
21:26I think it's going
21:27to be far over.
21:28That's a record.
21:28It's already a record
21:29in eight months.
21:31It's a record by a lot.
21:32And so we're doing
21:33well as a country,
21:34so the last thing
21:35we want to do
21:35is shut it down.
21:36But a lot of good
21:39can come down
21:39from shutdowns.
21:40We can get rid
21:41of a lot of things
21:42that we didn't want.
21:43And they'd be
21:44Democrat things,
21:45but they want
21:45open borders.
21:46They want men
21:47playing in women's sports.
21:48They want transgender
21:49for everybody.
21:50They never stop.
21:51They don't learn.
21:52We won an election
21:53in a landslide.
21:54They just don't learn.
21:55So we have no choice.
21:56I have to do that
21:57for the country.
21:58Yes?
21:59You mentioned a deal
22:00with Harvard.
22:01Mr. President,
22:02what is that deal?
22:02Will they be paying
22:03the administration?
22:04Well, we're in the process
22:05of getting very close,
22:06and Linda's finishing up
22:07the final details,
22:09and they'll be paying
22:09about $500 million,
22:12and they'll be operating
22:13trade schools.
22:14They're going to be
22:15teaching people
22:15how to do AI
22:16and lots of other things,
22:18engines,
22:19lots of things.
22:20You know,
22:20we need people
22:21in trade schools.
22:22I remember when I went
22:22to school,
22:23I had some people
22:23that weren't particularly
22:24good students,
22:26but they could take
22:26a motor or an engine
22:28apart, blindfolded,
22:30and put it back,
22:31blindfolded.
22:31But they weren't too good
22:33at other things,
22:34and many of them
22:37ended up doing better
22:37than the people that were.
22:39So trade schools
22:40are very important,
22:41and we've lost trade schools.
22:42We used to have
22:43a lot of trade schools
22:44in this country.
22:45We don't have them anymore.
22:46We have tremendous plants
22:47opening,
22:48and we want to have people
22:49at top level
22:50for those plants,
22:51whether it's AI
22:52or whether it's
22:53automotive plants.
22:54You know,
22:54we have many automobile companies
22:57opening their plants
22:58in the United States.
22:59They're all coming back
23:00for two reasons.
23:01tariffs,
23:02and I think they like
23:03November 5th.
23:04You know,
23:04they like the person
23:05that was chosen,
23:06and they're moving in
23:08from Canada.
23:08They're moving in
23:09from Mexico.
23:10They're coming in
23:10from all over the world.
23:12China is coming.
23:13They're all coming,
23:14and that way
23:14they avoid paying tariffs,
23:16so you know,
23:16they're coming
23:16for that reason.
23:18So by opening up
23:19trade schools,
23:20because we're going
23:20to need employees.
23:21We're going to need
23:22people with skill,
23:23and I think I can say,
23:24Linda,
23:24you feel the same way.
23:25By opening up trade schools,
23:26this would be a giant
23:27trade school,
23:28series of trade schools.
23:30It would be run by Harvard.
23:31Now,
23:32this is something
23:32that we're close
23:33to finalizing.
23:34We haven't done it yet,
23:36but they put up
23:37$500 million interest
23:39and everything else
23:40would go to that account,
23:42meaning go to
23:43the trade school,
23:45and you know,
23:46it's a big investment
23:47in trade school,
23:47done by very smart people,
23:48and then their sins
23:51are forgiven.
23:52So we have a good chance
23:54of getting that close.
23:55Yeah, please.
23:55The Pressure
23:56Thank you.
23:57I've been looking
23:59at this chart
23:59that you showed us earlier
24:00since we left
24:01the Oval Office earlier.
24:02U.S. prices
24:03for brand drugs
24:04are 422% higher
24:06than in comparable countries.
24:07You know,
24:08I'm young,
24:08maybe I'm inexperienced,
24:10but I think a lot
24:10of Americans
24:11are wondering,
24:12how did we even get here,
24:13being one of the biggest buyers?
24:14You got here
24:15by incompetent people
24:16sitting behind this desk.
24:18You had a lot
24:19of incompetent people.
24:21I did it,
24:21as you know.
24:22I did,
24:22I started it
24:23in my first term.
24:25We rebuilt the military.
24:27We got the largest
24:28tax cuts in history.
24:29We did all these things,
24:30and we had the best economy
24:31in the history of our country
24:32during my first term.
24:34And by the way,
24:34this is blowing it away
24:35based on what we're seeing.
24:37But we got it
24:38by having people
24:40allow that to happen.
24:41And as you know,
24:42I started the process,
24:43but then when COVID came,
24:44we focused on COVID,
24:46not on this.
24:47And I said,
24:48if I ever go back,
24:50if I ever go back
24:51and do it again,
24:53I'm going to make this
24:53a primary thing
24:55because other countries
24:56are paying a fraction
24:56of what we pay
24:57for the same exact drug,
25:00same exact pharmaceutical,
25:01everything.
25:02And I said,
25:03no,
25:03that's not right.
25:05And the drug companies
25:06actually came along.
25:07You know,
25:07don't forget,
25:07they make 30,
25:0840,
25:0850 million a year,
25:09these people.
25:10They're very smart.
25:11And they had a lot
25:13of people convinced
25:13that's the way
25:15it has to be.
25:15They talked about
25:16research and development.
25:17We had to pay.
25:18I said,
25:19well,
25:19why isn't Germany paying?
25:20Why aren't other countries paying?
25:22And they always had
25:23a good answer,
25:23but it got to a point
25:25where I didn't like
25:26the answer anymore.
25:27And I said,
25:27we have to do this.
25:28And we did.
25:29And the team
25:29that we have
25:30with Oz and Bobby
25:31and Chris
25:32and all of the people
25:33that we have
25:33working on it.
25:34And I must tell you,
25:36Marty's been a big
25:38wherever you're at,
25:38but Marty's been a big,
25:40a big factor.
25:42We have a great team.
25:43There's never been
25:44a medical team like this.
25:45And I said,
25:46let's go do it.
25:47And then I just,
25:48I did,
25:48as I said,
25:49I would bug them
25:50every single day,
25:51every week.
25:52Because I said,
25:53we have to have,
25:54I mean,
25:54why should we be paying
25:5510 times
25:56what another country's paying?
25:58And that was just an excuse,
25:59you know,
26:00research and development.
26:01We do research and development.
26:02So now we're going to be paying
26:05whatever the lowest price is,
26:06we're going to be paying
26:07that price.
26:08So it's a great thing.
26:09But there won't be anything
26:11that can have the impact
26:12on Medicare, Medicaid,
26:14Social Security,
26:15anything where you need
26:16pharmaceuticals, medicines.
26:18The numbers are going
26:19to come way down.
26:20Even Obamacare,
26:21which is terrible.
26:22It's not been good,
26:23as you know.
26:24It's a weak form of health care.
26:26But it'll be better
26:27because the medicine's
26:28going to come in
26:30at a very low price.
26:31Yes, please.
26:31Yes, Mr. President.
26:32It seems like every time
26:33you assemble your Maha team
26:35and your cabinet members
26:36behind here
26:37in regards to health issues,
26:39it just keeps getting powerful.
26:40And I look at these young kids there
26:42and the weight
26:43that is on the world right now
26:45that you can lift
26:46by what you're doing.
26:48I've often said,
26:50Trump could cure cancer
26:51and people would still
26:53criticize him.
26:54That's true.
26:55And it's true.
26:55What is your message
26:57to America
26:58that this potentially
26:59could bring us all together,
27:01get us on the same page
27:02and have unity?
27:03And I'd like to see
27:04if some of the kids
27:04or the parents
27:05have what it means to you
27:06to see President Trump
27:07get involved with this.
27:08Well, we've made tremendous
27:09strides in cancer research,
27:11far more than anyone has done.
27:13And we have the greatest minds,
27:14the greatest people
27:15working on it.
27:16And childhood,
27:17you know,
27:17they call it childhood cancer.
27:19It's a very specific thing.
27:20and we've really made
27:22a lot of progress.
27:25I think something
27:26that's going to allow us
27:27to make a lot of progress
27:28is the money we're saving
27:29on pharmaceuticals.
27:31We'll be saving 500,
27:34600, 1,000 percent.
27:36Nobody's ever heard of that.
27:38I told the story,
27:39you were here before,
27:40that when I was
27:41in the previous administration,
27:43my first term,
27:45I was so proud of myself
27:46because I'm the first president
27:49that in 28 years,
27:50they cut drug prices
27:51from beginning to end.
27:52So they went down.
27:53I think it was one-eighth
27:54of a percent
27:55or one-quarter of one percent.
27:56And I was so proud of that,
27:58Oz.
27:58I thought that was great.
27:59Now I'm cutting them 500 percent.
28:02And I will say this,
28:03politically speaking,
28:05the people understand.
28:06Otherwise,
28:06I wouldn't have won
28:07in a landslide.
28:08You know,
28:08I get 97 percent bad press
28:10and I won in a landslide,
28:12which tells you
28:12the press has no credibility.
28:15But I will say
28:15that what we've done
28:17has been a great tribute
28:19to the people
28:20that are standing behind me
28:21in different forms.
28:23Linda in education,
28:24different,
28:24but what she's doing
28:25in education,
28:26she's sending education
28:28back to the states.
28:29That's a big move.
28:31The states,
28:31like, you know,
28:31you go back to Indiana,
28:34Iowa,
28:34you know,
28:35I would say 40 states
28:36will be great.
28:3845 will be,
28:40you know,
28:40the five percent of them
28:41will be pretty good.
28:43But,
28:44and then you're going
28:44to have a Gavin Newsom
28:46and some other people
28:47that aren't going
28:48to do a good job.
28:48But, you know,
28:49we'll help them out.
28:50I want to help them out.
28:51And we're going
28:52to have safe cities again.
28:53We're going to be very safe.
28:54We're going to be going
28:55to Chicago pretty soon
28:56because a friend of mine,
28:59a great guy,
29:00the head of the Union Pacific,
29:01he said,
29:02sir,
29:02you have to save Chicago.
29:03It's going bad.
29:04It's going bad fast
29:05and it's a great city.
29:07He's right.
29:07It's a great city.
29:08I know it very well.
29:09And we have to save Chicago.
29:11So we're going
29:12to Memphis, Tennessee right now.
29:14We've had a home run in D.C.
29:16and you can walk out.
29:17Brian,
29:17you got mugged here
29:18a long time ago.
29:20Yes, sir.
29:20And the mugger
29:21must have felt some pain
29:22because you're a tough cookie.
29:23Well, he had a gun
29:24and I wish I would have
29:25had Triple H with me as well.
29:26Yeah.
29:28If he had a gun,
29:29all you can do
29:29is say thank you very much.
29:30Thank you very much.
29:31Yeah.
29:32No, but it's,
29:33everybody here,
29:34I mean,
29:35you were here in the room
29:37when I said to the reporters,
29:38who got mugged
29:39in the last year?
29:41And like half of the people
29:42raised their hand.
29:43and now if you said
29:44who got mugged
29:45over the last 60 days,
29:47nobody,
29:48nobody,
29:49no killing,
29:50no nothing.
29:51And the restaurants
29:51are booming,
29:52the town is booming,
29:53it's clean.
29:54You know,
29:54the National Guard
29:55actually went out
29:56and started cleaning
29:57all the crap
29:58out of the parks.
29:59The tents are knocked down.
30:01We had one that you said
30:02it was a blue tent
30:03and you said
30:04it was a communist tent,
30:05right?
30:05See,
30:05we're going to have
30:06a communist mayor
30:07of New York.
30:07So, you know,
30:08let's see how that works out.
30:09And I've gotten
30:09a lot of feedback on that.
30:10everyone's very appreciative
30:11that you were moving
30:12that tent.
30:13You told me about
30:14a blue tent
30:15and I said,
30:15I can't be there
30:16because we knocked
30:17them down.
30:17But this was
30:18a very highly sophisticated
30:19group of people
30:21that had permits
30:22and all the other things.
30:23Well,
30:23the permit expired.
30:24We knocked it down.
30:25It took, what,
30:2624 hours less,
30:27maybe.
30:27Yes, sir.
30:28So I appreciate
30:29you telling me that.
30:29No,
30:30we have a great thing
30:31going on.
30:31The country is doing
30:32incredible.
30:33We are a hot country.
30:35The hottest.
30:36We're the hottest country
30:36in the world right now.
30:37Do the parents
30:37or the kids
30:38have anything
30:38they like to say?
30:39Yeah,
30:39that's a great question.
30:40Would you like
30:41to say something?
30:42I would.
30:42That's a good comment
30:44right there.
30:44That's the best comment
30:45you've made
30:45in a long time.
30:48Mr. President,
30:49good evening.
30:49I'm Josh Armstrong.
30:51My name is Josh Armstrong.
30:52I'm from West Virginia
30:52and I'm the father
30:53of this amazingly brave,
30:55resilient little
30:55six-year-old,
30:56Laurel.
30:57Laurel was diagnosed
30:58with leukemia
30:59when she was two years old,
31:00just before her third birthday.
31:02And we went on to watch
31:03as she spent months
31:04in the hospital
31:05fighting for her life
31:06as she received
31:07blood transfusions
31:08and platelet transfusions
31:09as she fought off
31:10one potentially fatal
31:12infection after another.
31:13We watched as her body
31:15swelled and became
31:16painful from steroids
31:17and then as it became
31:19frail and weak
31:20from chemotherapy.
31:22And we watched
31:23and we wondered
31:23why there aren't
31:24better treatments available
31:25and we wondered
31:25what might happen
31:26if she doesn't get
31:27the drugs she needs.
31:28And we wondered
31:28why isn't anybody
31:29doing more?
31:30and on behalf
31:32of myself
31:33and all the parents
31:33that have watched
31:35and wondered,
31:36we'd like to say
31:36that what you're doing
31:37today gives parents
31:39like me
31:39and children like Laurel
31:40the one thing
31:41that we most desperately need
31:42and that's hope.
31:44And Laurel's doing well.
31:46And Laurel is,
31:46I'm happy to say
31:47Laurel's in remission today.
31:49That's good.
31:49She looks so beautiful.
31:50Thank you.
31:51She is beautiful.
31:51You feeling good now?
31:52Thank you.
31:59That's for you.
31:59You look so great.
32:00Because of this bill
32:01doctors are going
32:02to be able to get
32:03better treatments
32:04faster to patients
32:05like Laurel.
32:06And because of you
32:08making children
32:09like her real children
32:10not cases or statistics
32:11but children like Laurel
32:12and all these children
32:13here today
32:14we have that hope
32:16and we are so proud
32:17that you're standing
32:17with children with cancer
32:18and making it
32:19a national priority.
32:20That's very nice.
32:20Thank you Mr. President.
32:21We're with you all the way.
32:23How about you?
32:24Back there, Dad?
32:25Actually,
32:26I'd like my daughter to speak.
32:28Oh, I like that much.
32:29Carolyn would like to speak.
32:30She's lots for you.
32:30I'd like you to speak.
32:32Thank you.
32:33Good afternoon.
32:34My name is Carolyn Hendricks.
32:35When I was four years old
32:36I was diagnosed
32:37with Ewing sarcoma
32:38a pediatric bone cancer.
32:40Eleven years later
32:41I'm now 16 years old
32:42and I'm doing great.
32:44What you're doing today
32:45Mr. President
32:46means that kids like me
32:48will get better options
32:49and so much more hope
32:50for the future.
32:51This will help doctors
32:52use technology
32:53to find cures faster,
32:55match patients
32:56to trials more quickly
32:57and give our families
32:58more control
32:59over our health.
33:01For kids,
33:01every day counts.
33:03This order shows
33:03that our lives matter enough
33:05to be first in line
33:06for innovation.
33:08On behalf of children
33:09and young adults
33:10with cancer,
33:11those still fighting
33:12and those in remission
33:13like me
33:13and families
33:14who wish that they
33:15had more time together.
33:17Thank you for making us
33:18a national priority.
33:20Mr. President,
33:21because of actions like this,
33:23kids like me
33:24have the chance
33:24to grow up,
33:25to chase our dreams
33:26and to live full lives
33:28and that is the greatest gift
33:29anyone could ever give.
33:30Wow.
33:31That was so good.
33:37I'm very wondering
33:38you probably could not
33:39have done that
33:39like you before.
33:40You did as a big service,
33:43Father.
33:43Yes, sir.
33:44That's great.
33:45When did you learn
33:45how to speak like that?
33:47I've done lots of speeches
33:48for childhood cancer
33:50over the last few years
33:51and I'm also in a theater
33:53program,
33:53so that helps a lot.
33:55That's a great job.
33:55Would anybody like
33:56to say something?
33:58Would anybody?
33:58Would you like
33:59to say something?
34:00Yes.
34:01I'm Eleni Myers
34:02when I was nine years old
34:03and I had a blood cancer
34:06called leukemia
34:07when I was only two years old.
34:09I had to get treated
34:11at seven different hospitals
34:13across this country
34:14and I had to have
34:17two mammogram transplants,
34:18one for my dad
34:19and one for my mom
34:20and I had to spend
34:22many days
34:22and the nights
34:23in the hospital
34:24getting pokies
34:25and yucky medicine
34:26and me and my parents
34:28are very worried
34:29and I had to go
34:31through those
34:31seven different hospitals
34:32to find the best
34:33treatment that can
34:34make me better
34:35and thank you
34:36Mr. President
34:38for making everything
34:39happen today
34:40so kids like me
34:43and Laura
34:44we can still be living
34:45today and speaking.
34:46Wow.
34:47We're not doing so well
34:58today
34:59they're doing so good
35:00that was fantastic
35:01thank you
35:01and you're feeling good now?
35:03Yes.
35:03Are you all better?
35:05You're pretty
35:05pretty close right?
35:07Yes.
35:07Yeah I hear you're
35:08going to do good
35:08anybody like to say something?
35:11Yes sir go ahead.
35:12I've been
35:13I've had a brain tumor
35:15since those four months
35:16now I'm off brain
35:18I'm off home
35:19and I'm a cancer survivor
35:20I've had a brain tumor
35:22since those four months
35:23and I'm doing great
35:23I'm 15 now
35:24and I'm going to 10th grade.
35:25And you're going to be
35:26a football player
35:26offensive lineman.
35:27How about somebody else?
35:36I love hearing this
35:37I love hearing you talk
35:39because you talk better
35:40than any of us
35:41thank you Mr. President
35:43I want to thank you all
35:45for being here
35:45amazing
35:46we wouldn't miss this
35:47thank you
35:48but you know
35:49we're doing a lot for you
35:51and we're going to
35:51you're all going to be
35:53better very soon
35:54I don't think you're going
35:54to need any of the help
35:55that we're giving
35:56it's going to be
35:56for the future
35:57but I want to thank you
35:59for being with us
36:00and I'm going to bring
36:01them back to a room
36:02we have a room
36:02where we have lots of
36:03hats and things
36:04in the back
36:05and we're going to
36:05would you like to go back
36:06and we'll pick some
36:07nice presents
36:08we'll get rid of
36:10the wonderful people
36:12of the media
36:13do you like the media?
36:14they're nice right?
36:16they have good days right?
36:19they do actually
36:20they do
36:20thank you very much
36:21that's beautiful
36:22that's really good
36:22and thank you
36:23we're not going to top that
36:25so I wanted to
36:26thank you all very much
36:27thank you
36:28thank you
36:29thank you
36:29thank you
36:57thank you
37:00Grazie a tutti
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