00:00For the time being, the ceasefire remains in place.
00:06It's unbelievably weak, I would say.
00:09I would call it the weakest right now.
00:13After reading that piece of garbage they sanitized it.
00:15I didn't even finish reading it.
00:17They said I'm going to waste my time reading it.
00:19I would say it's one of the weakest right now.
00:22It's our life support.
00:24They understand these are all medical people.
00:27Dr. Oz, life support is not a good thing.
00:30I would say the ceasefire is on massive life support.
00:34Where the doctor walks in and says,
00:38Sir, your loved one has approximately a 1% chance of living.
00:43Yeah.
00:44Mr. President.
00:45Daniel, go ahead.
00:46Yep.
00:46One of the best reporters in Washington.
00:49Thank you, sir.
00:50Dr. Oz referenced this a little early.
00:51Two questions on healthcare, if I can.
00:53The Council of Economic Advisers released a report saying that
00:56the most favored nation drug deals will generate about $529 billion
01:01in domestic savings over the next 10 years across all markets.
01:05How transformative are these deals?
01:08And makes people better.
01:08Yeah, it does.
01:09How transformative are these deals for millions of Americans?
01:13And do you believe that the most favored nation drug deals
01:16are the Republicans' golden ticket to the midterms?
01:19I think the Republicans should walk away with the midterms.
01:22Now, typically, whoever is president, they vote the other way.
01:26Nobody knows this.
01:27Do we have a psychiatrist in the group?
01:30Nobody knows what.
01:31Because I think we've had the best president.
01:33A lot of people have said, even some radical left lunatics have said
01:36that we've had the best presidency, the best first year of any president.
01:40Look, I stopped eight wars, got the largest tax cuts in history,
01:43the largest regulation cuts in history.
01:45All the things we've done, so many, like all of this that we've done.
01:49Medically, we've done so much.
01:52You know, we did a thing called right to try in my first.
01:55And I could never understand it when I was a civilian,
01:57which wasn't so long ago.
01:59I haven't been doing it that long, but I always used to marvel at the fact
02:02that if they had a great drug and it had to go through the FDA,
02:07and the FDA guarded it and said, you can't use it.
02:11And if a person was terminally ill and the drug was showing great promise,
02:16the person's terminally ill, they wouldn't give it to the person
02:19because they didn't want to hurt the person.
02:21And I said, well, we need something on that.
02:23And it was very important to me.
02:24And I had no idea it would be so hard to get, but we got it in total.
02:28So, let's go.
02:28Let's go.
02:28Let's go.
02:29Let's go.
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