Trump thanked 'great people' shown in Twitter video in which a man chants 'white power'
(CNN)President Donald Trump on Sunday morning widely shared a video he said is from the Villages, a retirement community in Florida, in which a man driving a golf cart with Trump campaign posters is seen chanting "white power."
The President retweeted the video that showed the community's Trump supporters and anti-Trump protesters arguing with one another. The President thanked the "great people" shown in the video.
"Thank you to the great people of The Villages. The Radical Left Do Nothing Democrats will Fall in the Fall. Corrupt Joe is shot. See you soon!!" he wrote in the tweet. Roughly three hours later, the tweet no longer appeared in Trump's timeline.
https://twitter.com/realDonaldTrump/status/1277204969561755649 this was up for 3 hours
https://twitter.com/i/events/1277226958074478593 He did not hear that one statement' WH spokesperson says after Trump deletes controversial 'White power' Tweet
On Sunday, President Trump retweeted and then deleted a video reportedly taken at The Villages in Florida which shows protesters chanting "racist" at a White couple driving by in a golf cart with a "Trump 2020" and an "America First" sign. The man driving gives a thumbs up and yells back, "White power!"
https://twitter.com/davenewworld_2/status/1276965068048158720 Seniors from The Villages in Florida protesting against each other:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=anjdgFPapHE Trump retweets video of supporter shouting 'white power
In ‘God, guns and Trump’ country, simmering doubts about the president
June 27
In an interview in the back room of his Lake Havasu City gun store, where his four rescue dogs circled underfoot, he ticked off what he sees as Trump’s accomplishments: the rollback of Obama-era clean-energy rules, the movement of the U.S. Embassy in Israel from Tel Aviv to Jerusalem, new policies that make it harder for migrants to seek asylum in the United States.
“He’s gotten more done than the last 20 presidents,” said Scarmardo.
His shop, Sam’s Shooter’s Emporium, features a life-size cardboard cutout of the president by the front door and a bulletin board that looks like Trump’s Twitter feed come to life. One poster questions the legitimacy of President Obama’s birth certificate; another compares the hijab worn by U.S. Rep. Ilhan Omar to a diaper.
In the bathroom are copies of former First Lady Michelle Obama’s autobiography — whose pages are used as toilet paper.
Such unapologetic displays of the kind of bigoted and divisive views embraced by Trump have never been a problem here, said Scarmardo.
“We don’t get much argument,” he said.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0Wix00RmvjY John Iadarola Discovers Conspiracy Influencers
https://www.jpmorgan.com/country/US/en/research/covid-19-across-markets
Three employees at this Berkeley restaurant tested positive for COVID-19. Here's what they went through to reopen
June 26
Rolling Stones Protest Trump Using Their Music at Rally, Threaten Lawsuit
Houston hospitals hit 100% base ICU capacity. Then they stopped reporting data.
Texas Medical Center hospitals have stopped reporting key metrics showing the stress rising numbers of COVID-19 patients are placing on their facilities, undermining data that policy makers and the public have relied upon during the pandemic to gauge the spread of the coronavirus.
Trump campaign scrambling to revive the president’s imperiled reelection bid
June 28
Numerous national polls show Trump losing significant ground with seniors and among white voters, including both those with and without four-year college degrees. He has also slipped among white evangelical voters. According to new New York Times/Siena College polls, Trump is at least slightly behind Biden in six states that he won in 2016 and are pivotal to his reelection path — including Michigan, Pennsylvania and Wisconsin, where he trails by double digits.
“You can’t win with these numbers. They’re atrocious numbers,” said Edward J. Rollins, co-chairman of the pro-Trump super PAC Great America and the former campaign manager for Ronald Reagan’s 1984 reelection campaign.
“Over the past four months, the president’s support among Republican voters has ranged between 90 and 94 percent consistently,” said Tony Fabrizio, the campaign’s chief pollster, referring to the campaign’s internal polls. “As of our most recently polling, it stands at 94 percent.”
No comments:
Post a Comment