Why would we want too ?! He’s a piece of shytThe Don Dada
We won't see another guy like Trump
Why would we want too ?! He’s a piece of shytThe Don Dada
We won't see another guy like Trump
You sound stupid as fukk. Bigging up a waste of of a human who couldn't give a fukk about youThe Don Dada
We won't see another guy like Trump
Wow! That cover hits different!
TIME putting their foot on the Trump administrations neck!
I'm going to cop an issue.
Hannity asked him about her last night. He was just like “yeah yeah she’s fine”they must be fukked up bad because they havent said shyt about them. barr too. shyt is his mail order bride dead yet? i dont think i heard an update on her
they must be fukked up bad because they havent said shyt about them. barr too. shyt is his mail order bride dead yet? i dont think i heard an update on her
Donny MontanaThe Don Dada
We won't see another guy like Trump
I hung out with you on Mother’s Day......because your mothers dead
Siegel was among the first on Fox News to promote hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19
- On March 12, Siegel was among the first Fox personalities to promote hydroxychloroquine as a potential treatment for COVID-19.
- Two days later, Siegel called the use of the drug in other countries as a COVID-19 treatment “promising.”
- On March 21, Fox host Jeanine Pirro praised Siegel in an interview for being “among the first to tell us about a critical drug that’s being looked at to fight the coronavirus.”
- On March 23, Siegel said that “a lot of early evidence looks good” regarding hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19.
- The next day Siegel said he agreed “completely” with host Tucker Carlson that “the media are saying” hydroxychloroquine is “a conspiracy theory just because Trump mentioned it.”
- On March 24, Siegel said hydroxychloroquine “may very well be” a treatment for COVID-19.
- Siegel promoted the use of hydroxychloroquine as a “very promising” prophylactic for COVID-19, even as he admitted the lack of “substantial clinical trials” studying the drug on March 27’s Tucker Carlson Tonight.
- On March 30, he praised Carlson for focusing on hydroxychloroquine and partly attributed the network’s coverage to the FDA’s emergency use authorization.
- On April 3, Siegel said: “I can't prove to you that [hydroxychloroquine] works at this point, but it's extremely promising. And there's a lot of evidence that it does work.”
- Siegel promoted hydroxychloroquine as a coronavirus treatment by citing his own father's experience using the drug to treat an unspecified illness.
- On July 6, Carlson and Siegel cited a flawed study in order to continue pushing hydroxychloroquine as a treatment for COVID-19 weeks after the FDA had revoked its emergency use authorization.
Siegel downplayed the president’s diagnosis
Siegel has downplayed the threat of the novel coronavirus since the earliest days of the pandemic
- On October 2, Siegel promoted hydroxychloroquine following the news of Trump’s coronavirus infection, saying that “research has not really backed” up the efficacy of the drug, but “I don’t think it’s ever been ruled out.”
- Siegel, who has engaged in unsubstantiated speculation about the health of former Vice President Joe Biden, downplayed Trump’s positive diagnosis for COVID-19, telling Fox & Friends co-host Brian Kilmeade, “There is no question in my mind by the way, Brian, he can perform his duties 100%. No symptoms, that’s not even an issue here.”
- On October 7, less than a week after the president announced he had contracted the novel coronavirus, Siegel said there's no concern over Trump working in the West Wing while still contagious despite the threat it poses to White House staff. He also noted that “the ventilation system and the air purification system in the Oval Office is excellent.”
- On March 6, Siegel said the “worst-case scenario” for coronavirus is “it could be the flu.”
- That same day, he claimed coronavirus concerns are being intentionally overblown to hurt Trump politically.
- He attacked the World Health Organization as “a bunch of alarmists” and “saber rattlers” for warning about coronavirus, claiming, “There's no reason to believe that it's actually more problematic or deadly than influenza.” (About a month later, Siegel attacked the WHO for “underreacting.”)
- On March 8, Siegel agreed with Fox & Friends Weekend co-host Pete Hegseth after he said, “I feel like the more I learn about this, the less there is to worry about.” Siegel responded, “I was about to say the same thing.”
- On March 10, he called concern about coronavirus “paranoia” and suggested it was caused by a “fear of going outdoors. It’s agoraphobia, they have testing for that.”
- On April 20, Siegel cited unreliable antibody testing data to claim: “The death rate is much, much lower than we’ve been talking about if you think about all these asymptomatic cases versus the tragic 600 that passed away. … We’re talking about a virus that for most cases is dramatically mild, we’re talking about a lower fatality rate than we thought.”
- On April 24, Siegel again used antibody data to claim that “the hospitalization rate and the death rate, especially, is way much lower than what we thought it was. Much lower.”
- On May 13, he said there will be no “big second wave” of coronavirus in America and pushed to reopen schools in person, adding: “Politically, if you think the Democrats are going to let the liberal colleges stay closed, think again. Those are their future voters.”
- On July 5, Siegel downplayed the surge of summer cases as “manageable” and claimed “overall it’s milder cases,” even as the daily death toll began to rise again.
- On July 7, he said schools need to reopen because “the risk to teachers is so much lower than it is to doctors.”
- On the same day, Siegel said, “The spread among the young is not what is leading to the deaths or hospitalizations.” Recent research has shown this is false: During the time period Siegel made this remark, young people were catching and spreading the disease and may have later passed it on to older, more vulnerable populations.
- Siegel on Dr. Anthony Fauci’s assessment that the U.S. is “knee-deep” in the coronavirus crisis: “Notice he didn't say ‘thigh-deep.’ … We’re not seeing in the West and the South as many sick patients, as many patients on ventilators.”
- Siegel praised Texas Republican Gov. Greg Abbott for his handling of the coronavirus on July 13, even as new cases, hospitalizations, and deaths from COVID-19 were all going up in the state.
This one did tooWow! That cover hits different!
TIME putting their foot on the Trump administrations neck!
I'm going to cop an issue.