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Author Topic: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2  (Read 465198 times)

Offline Paul May

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1056 on: July 29, 2020, 02:37:53 AM »
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I don't care that Storing worships Donald Trump and has an opposite viewpoint.

But that's just it, just like Trump, Storing hasn't got an opposite viewpoint. He's got no viewpoint whatsoever. He couldn't explain to you what he stands for if it saved his life.

He just hates America

Damn good posting.

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1056 on: July 29, 2020, 02:37:53 AM »


Offline Paul May

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1057 on: July 29, 2020, 02:50:39 AM »
Complaint: Trump Making Illegal Secret Payments, Including To His Own Family

WASHINGTON — President Donald Trump’s campaign is violating federal election law by funneling close to a quarter-billion dollars to date through private companies in order to hide the ultimate recipients of the money, including the wife of one of his sons and the girlfriend of another, a watchdog group charged in a complaint filed Tuesday.

“The money is being laundered through corporations run by top Trump campaign officials,” said Brendan Fischer, a lawyer with the Campaign Legal Center. “That has the effect of keeping the public in the dark as to a big chunk of Trump campaign spending.”

The group’s complaint with the Federal Election Commission asks for an investigation to put an end to the practice and to punish the campaign with fines.

How quickly any of that might happen, though, is an open question, given that the commission currently does not have a quorum to take official actions. Even with one in place, investigations can last for several years.

According to the complaint, both Trump’s reelection campaign and a related fundraising group, the “Trump Make America Great Again Committee,” are breaking federal campaign law by running payments through former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale’s private firm as well as American Made Media Consultants, a company created specifically to place ads and buy related services for the campaign.

Parscale’s companies have already received $39 million from Trump’s campaign, the Republican National Committee and their joint fundraising committees, according to a HuffPost analysis of FEC filings from Jan. 20, 2017, through the end of June 2020. American Made Media Consultants has been paid $177.6 million from those same committees through that time period.

Among those payments: $180,000 a year each to Kimberly Guilfoyle, the girlfriend of Trump’s eldest son, Donald Trump Jr., and to Lara Trump, the wife of his second son, Eric Trump.

In April, Parscale acknowledged paying them through his firm, Parscale Strategy. “I can pay them however I want to pay them,” he told HuffPost.

Other secretly paid vendors appear to include those belonging to a Parscale associate, Gary Coby, that send out the ubiquitous mass fundraising text messages to many hundreds of thousands of Trump supporters multiple times per day.

One of the basic concepts behind federal campaign finance law is that Americans have a right to know how candidates, parties and political action committees raise money and spend it.

“This scheme violated the law and undermines the public’s right to know. What precisely is being hidden is unknown. We don’t know for sure,” Fischer said.

Trump campaign communications director Tim Murtaugh denied that the payments broke any laws.

“AMMC is a campaign vendor responsible for arranging and executing media buys and related services at fair market value,” Murtaugh said. “AMMC does not earn any commissions or fees. It builds efficiencies and saves the campaign money by providing these in-house services that otherwise would be done by outside vendors. The campaign reports all payments to AMMC as required by the FEC.”

The Republican National Committee, which also benefits from the work of Guilfoyle and Lara Trump, said in a statement from communications director Michael Ahrens: “The RNC and its joint fundraising committees comply with all FEC regulations and campaign finance laws.”

The Campaign Legal Center’s complaint says that previous rulings from the FEC make clear that paying vendors to perform services without itemizing sub-contractors and employees is only permissible when those payments are made in “arms-length” transactions. But when campaign officials are involved with a vendor’s business — such as Parscale’s clear involvement with his own private firm — then the vendor’s payments to contractors and employees must be itemized, the complaint said.

Under the Trump campaign’s theory that it can pay a lump sum to a private company like Parscale’s, there is nothing stopping it from funneling all of its spending that way each month, with the public getting zero details on how any of it is being spent, Fischer said.

He acknowledged that previous campaigns have used similar entities in the past — the presidential campaign of Republican Mitt Romney in 2012 created a firm, American Rambler, to buy all of its television advertising — but nothing on this scale.

“The Trump campaign has taken it to another level,” Fischer said.

Parscale was recently demoted from campaign manager to the head of digital strategy, the same job he had in Trump’s 2016 campaign, during which his firms were paid $93.9 million. Trump, according to informal advisers close to the White House, was unhappy with how much money Parscale had made for himself, even as the campaign and the RNC together spent close to a billion dollars and Trump himself slid in the polls.

Thanks to his newfound wealth, Parscale, who just a few years ago was designing websites in San Antonio for Trump’s properties, has been able to buy a $2.4 million waterfront house in Fort Lauderdale, Florida, a pair of million-dollar condos, a brand new $400,000 boat, and another half-million dollars in luxury cars, including a Range Rover and a Ferrari.

Offline Paul May

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1058 on: July 29, 2020, 03:45:15 AM »
Trump Asks at Covid Briefing Why Fauci Has a High Approval Rating But He Doesn’t
Josh Feldman

During Tuesday’s coronavirus press briefing, President Donald Trump mused aloud wondering why his approval rating isn’t as good as Dr. Anthony Fauci’s.

The president was confronted by reporters about some tweets he shared, including retweeting support for hydroxychloroquine and attacks on Fauci.

Trump said again he has a “very good relationship” with Fauci while he acknowledged he hasn’t “always agreed with him.”

He went on to compare their respective approval ratings:

“It’s interesting. He’s got a very good approval rating. And I like that. It’s good. Remember. He’s working for this administration. He’s working with us, John. We could have gotten other people. We could have gotten somebody else. It didn’t have to be Dr. Fauci. He’s working with our administration and for the most part we’ve done pretty much what he… Dr. Birx and others who are terrific recommended. And he’s got this high approval rating. So why don’t I have a high approval rating with respect to the virus? We should have it very high, because what we’ve done in terms of — we’re just reading off about the masks and the gowns and the ventilators and numbers that nobody’s seen and the testing at 55 million tests, we tested more than anybody in the world. I have a graph that I’d love to see you, perhaps you’ve seen it, we’re up here and the rest of the world is down at a level that’s just a tiny fraction of what we’ve done in terms of testing. So it sort of is curious. A man works for us, with us, very closely, Dr. Fauci, and Dr. Birx also, very highly thought of… but nobody likes me. It can only be my personality, that’s all.”


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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1058 on: July 29, 2020, 03:45:15 AM »


Offline Paul May

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1059 on: July 29, 2020, 03:52:57 AM »
Trump declares war – on America!

Give credit where credit is due. At least, Donald Trump’s kept one campaign promise. Running for president in 2016, he vowed he’d never launch a new foreign war. And he hasn’t. Not against Iran, North Korea or Venezuela. He’s launched a war against America’s cities, instead.

Yes, America is under attack, coast to coast. Not by foreign enemies. Not by terrorists. America’s under siege by goon squads of unauthorized and unneeded federal forces unleashed by President Donald Trump on America’s cities.

It started in Portland, Ore., where nightly protests against systemic racism in police departments, sparked by the killing of George Floyd, had grown smaller and more peaceful. Violence had practically disappeared. Until early July, when – uninvited by the mayor, governor, or Portland police – federal thugs suddenly arrived on the scene and violence flared up again. Nobody summed it up better than the New York Times headline: “Sent to Quell Unrest in Portland, Federal Agents Fan the Flames.”

Who are these federal agents? Not the military. When Defense Secretary Mark Esperrefused to allow Donald Trump to sic American soldiers on American civilians, Trump turned to “Acting” Homeland Security Secretary Chad Wolf, who willingly sent in agents from the Drug Enforcement Agency, Border Patrol, Federal Protective Service and U.S. Marshals Service – none of whom have any training in riot control or handling mass demonstrations – and none of whom have any business storming city streets unless local police request their help.

Trump insists Department of Homeland Security (DHS) forces are there to end the violence – which, again, by the time they arrived, no longer existed. Instead, they reignited violence by adopting tactics of Nazi Storm Troopers: wearing military-like camouflage uniforms with no identification or name tags, deploying tear gas, even against the mayor, firing projectiles from paintball guns, beating members of the “Wall of Moms” and other peaceful protestors with clubs, and kidnapping protestors and throwing them in unmarked vans without telling them what they’d been charged with or where they were being taken.

And it doesn’t stop there. As part of what he’s dubbed “Operation Legend,” Trump’s announced plans to send hundreds more agents to Kansas City, Chicago, Albuquerque, New York, and other cities – none of which have requested federal assistance and all of which have actually seen a decrease in violent crime during the pandemic.

Of course, there’s no doubt why Trump’s doing this. It has nothing to do with national security. It has everything to do with politics 2020. Less than 100 days out from Nov. 3, Trump knows he’ll lose if this election’s a referendum on his failed leadership on the coronavirus pandemic, so he’s desperately trying to change the subject in order to run as the “law and order” candidate.

It’s all so transparent. Trump falsely accuses Joe Biden of wanting to defund police. He falsely accuses Democrats of being soft on crime. He falsely declares American cities (those with Democratic mayors) of being on fire. And where things are calm, he sends in federal agents to create their own violence – so Trump can then take credit for stopping it. Meanwhile, his reelection campaign’s already running TV ads painting Trump as Mr. “Law and Order.” Again, anything to detract voters from thinking about 150,000 Americans who’ve died so far from the coronavirus on Mr. Trump’s watch.

But here’s the greatest outrage. As Republican Tom Ridge, the first secretary of DHS, reminded us this week, the department was created in the wake of Sept. 11 to protect America from global terrorism. Yet Donald Trump has converted its officers into his “personal militia” and unleashed it against American citizens. And Republican leaders of Congress say nothing. Shame!

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1060 on: July 29, 2020, 04:18:35 AM »
I don't care that Storing worships Donald Trump and has an opposite viewpoint.

But that's just it, just like Trump, Storing hasn't got an opposite viewpoint. He's got no viewpoint whatsoever. He couldn't explain to you what he stands for if it saved his life.

He just hates America

Thumb1:

The cult


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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1060 on: July 29, 2020, 04:18:35 AM »


Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1061 on: July 29, 2020, 04:51:43 AM »
No surprise about this. I called this when it started. White Supremacists with black umbrellas have been infiltrating peaceful protests to cause violence all over America. The protests are peaceful and these guys start breaking windows, looting, starting fires. The right wingers and their bogus media call it "Antifa" blaming the left and Democrats. This is their own people doing it to pin on the Democrats. Like I said....political theatre and Donald Trump sends in his thugs to escalate the violence as they attack, beat, gas, spray Americans in the streets. When Donald Trump loses in a massive landslide all these criminals will be held accountable for what they did.


Minneapolis police say 'Umbrella Man' was a white supremacist trying to incite George Floyd rioting





A masked man who was seen in a viral video smashing the windows of a south Minneapolis auto parts store during the George Floyd protests, earning him the moniker "Umbrella Man," is suspected of ties with a white supremacist group and sought to incite racial tension, police said.

A Minneapolis police arson investigator said the act of vandalism at the AutoZone on E. Lake Street helped spark a chain reaction that led to days of looting and rioting. The store was among dozens of buildings across the city that burned to the ground in the days that followed.

"This was the first fire that set off a string of fires and looting throughout the precinct and the rest of the city," Sgt. Erika Christensen wrote in a search warrant affidavit filed in court this week. "Until the actions of the person your affiant has been calling 'Umbrella Man,' the protests had been relatively peaceful. The actions of this person created an atmosphere of hostility and tension. Your affiant believes that this individual's sole aim was to incite violence."

Police identified "Umbrella Man" thanks to a tip that came via e-mail last week, Christensen said.

The Star Tribune could not independently verify the police account, which has so far only surfaced in the search warrant, and isn't naming the man because so far he has not been charged with a crime. The man, who has a criminal history that includes convictions of domestic violence and assault, did not respond to messages seeking comment. Spokespersons for the Minneapolis Police Department and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, which is also involved in the investigation, declined to comment.

Floyd's death under the knee of a since-fired police officer set off protests that spread around the world and stirred widespread reckoning over racial injustice. Derek Chauvin is charged with second-degree murder and manslaughter, and three of his former colleagues also at the scene, J. Alexander Kueng, Thomas Lane and Tou Thao, have been charged with aiding and abetting Chauvin.

At least two people died in the subsequent riots, which eventually spread as far as north Minneapolis and South St. Paul, and caused roughly $500 million in damage. Authorities have since charged a handful of people with arson-related crimes.

A widely shared livestream video from May 27 — two days after Floyd's death — showed the man walking casually along the front of the former site of AutoZone at E. Lake Street and Minnehaha, breaking out its windows with a 4-pound sledgehammer, prompting some protesters to confront him and demand that he stop. Before that, police say, the man, clad head to toe in black and carrying a black umbrella, had spray-painted "free [expletive] for everyone zone" on the double front doors. At the time, activists seized on the footage as proof that outside "provocateurs" were trying to derail what had been a mostly peaceful demonstration.

Christensen wrote in the affidavit that she watched "innumerable hours" of videos on social media platforms to try to identify "Umbrella Man," to no avail. Investigators finally caught a break when a tipster e-mailed the MPD identifying him as a member of the Hells Angels biker gang who "wanted to sow discord and racial unrest by breaking out the windows and writing what he did on the double red doors," she wrote.

A subsequent investigation revealed the man was also an associate of the Aryan Cowboy Brotherhood, a small white supremacist prison and street gang based primarily in Minnesota and Kentucky. Several of its members were also present at the Stillwater incident.

Andy Shoemaker, a former St. Paul police officer who has investigated criminal motorcycle gangs, said the Aryan Cowboys are relatively new with loyalties to the Hells Angels, who operate across the state.

"They're another group that's basically a farm system, a minor league for the Hells Angels," he said, adding the Angels occasionally recruit members from some of these offshoot clubs.

The weeks that followed Floyd's death brought dozens of reports of racially motivated assaults against minorities and minority-owned businesses.

Leaked intelligence briefings show that federal authorities were monitoring the movements and online activity of white nationalists and other extremist groups that descended on the city during the riots. The president of the Hells Angels summoned 75 members of the Aryan Cowboy Brotherhood to the help protect the club's headquarters in north Minneapolis, according to an intelligence memo, which surfaced in June as part of a massive trove of leaked law enforcement documents dubbed "Blue Leaks." A club member later posted a warning to protesters on Facebook saying that while the Angels agreed with the anti-law enforcement message, any protests that reached the clubhouse or "any of our neighborhoods" would be "met with a very unfriendly welcome party."

Another leaked memo suggested that local biker gangs were taking advantage of the unrest to step up their drug trafficking in the metro area, and that bikers "associated with white racially motivated violent extremists" had discussed inciting riots while posing as members of the anti-fascist group Antifa. It wasn't immediately clear from the leaked materials whether any of these threats materialized.

After the protests began, footage of "Umbrella Man" roared around social media, prompting speculation about the man's identity. One persistent rumor argued "Umbrella Man" was an undercover St. Paul police officer seeking to incite violence, a claim apparently based on a tweet citing information from a woman who claimed to have once been married to the officer.

In response, St. Paul police released time-stamped surveillance videos showing that the officer was in St. Paul at the time of the incident, and Police Chief Todd Axtell released a statement scolding social media users for spreading misinformation that could "jeopardize the officer's reputation and safety and chip away at the trust this police department has worked so hard to build with its community."

Justin Terrell, executive director of the Council for Minnesotans of African Heritage, said conversations around Floyd's death and the ensuing riots are important, but they often fail to account for the persistence of structural racism.

"I think at the end of the day, we need to start dealing with those issues, because I think this 'Umbrella Man,' he is a rotten piece of fruit at the farthest branch of the tree, [but] we've gotta get to the roots," Terrell said. "I think we have to do the work to get there, which America has never done, and Minnesota sure hasn't."

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1062 on: July 29, 2020, 12:45:20 PM »
Point is, slandering Trump a "Racist" has been Fake News fodder for Years. Yet, Nothing is mentioned regarding Racist Biden and his past, present, and ongoing Racist Actions and Words.

'Racist AF': Internet slams Trump's 'flaming racism’ after dig at Cory Booker during Iowa ‘telerally’
https://www.rawstory.com/2020/07/racist-af-internet-slams-trumps-flaming-racism-after-dig-at-cory-booker-during-iowa-telerally/

Offline Rick Plant

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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1063 on: July 29, 2020, 01:18:28 PM »
Speculation over Trump's health after ‘dragging’ right leg video: ‘What is wrong with him?’




Donald Trump’s mental and physical fitness is once again a topic of conversation on the president’s favorite social media platform.

In November, there was widespread speculation after Trump made an unscheduled trip to Walter Reed Hospital.

In June, the hashtag #TrumpIsNotWell trended nationwide on Twitter after Trump struggled to drink from a glass of water and walk down a ramp.

And Trump has spent multiple days in July bragging about acing a test to check for mental decline.

On Tuesday, the conversation continued after video of Trump’s Monday visit to North Carolina showed a peculiar gait, with the commander-in-chief swinging his foot sideways in a sweeping motion.

Comments:

"He’s been dragging it for weeks. Likely connected to his emergency trip to Bethesda. Stroke?"

"As a physcial therapist, I can tell you this gait pattern is exhibiting weakness in the right dorsiflexors and right hip flexors, creating the need to circumduct his leg to clear the floor. This is typical of someone with residual effects from a mild stroke."

"Something is wrong with Trump's right leg. I'm not kidding. This is a CNN video from yesterday. Look at his leg, it's malfunctioning. What is wrong with him, and why are we not being told the truth about Trump's health?" https://twitter.com/CNNNewsource/status/1288007359751757824

"He likely has Lewy Body dementia, a very specific form of it which involves both mental & physical deterioration simultaneously. It explains the weird body jerks/ticks @realDonaldTrump has had the past several yrs as well as the slurring & disjointed delusional garbage he spews."

"First symptom of dementia with a relative of mine."

"Right arm isnt moving either. Probably wore the mask to cover his drooping mouth."

"Ah whats goin on w Gumby's right leg. Medical ppl, go...#COVID19"

"I think he had at least a small stroke or something when he went unexpectedly to Walter Reed Hospital for part of his “physical”. And dementia."

"He is in severe decline, watch his right leg, the way he twitches when he is talking.  Remove him now."

"Residual from stroke. He has mild hemiparesis (right sided weakness). Same with his walk down the ramp leading with the left all the time and drinking from the glass of water, his left hand came up to assist the right one."

"Same side he had trouble with while drinking water and when he walked down the ramp the right side was the weak side....."

"I have been pointing out the deficits in his right leg for months. Of course it could be nerve damage to that leg but because he shows other signs involving other extremities/balance, I lean towards neuro disease/injury."






Trump campaign masked $170 million in ‘illegal’ payments: watchdog




A nonprofit transparency watchdog filed a complaint Tuesday with the Federal Election Commission (FEC) accusing President Donald Trump’s campaign and joint fundraising committee of laundering nearly $170 million through firms belonging to former campaign manager Brad Parscale and campaign lawyers.

The complaint accuses the Trump campaign of diverting money through two companies, American Made Media and Parscale Strategy, in order to hide the destinations for millions of dollars in payments. Parscale, who has been accused of “milking” Trump “like a cow,” was demoted earlier this month amid flagging poll numbers and several unforced errors.

The campaign allegedly used the same scheme to cover up previously reported payments to Trump family members and associates such as Lara Trump and Kimberly Guilfoyle — both of whom work for the campaign.

“This scheme is illegal,” Brendan Fischer, Director of the CLC Federal Reform Program, told Salon.

The names of a number of campaign vendors identified in previous reporting do not appear in the campaign’s FEC filings. Instead, it appears that the campaign reports its payments to American Made Media, a company created by Trump campaign officials, which then moves the funds to third-party vendors, according to the complaint.

For instance, reports indicate that the Trump campaign contracted with Realtime Media and Opn Sesame. Both are headed by Gary Coby, the campaign’s digital director. However, neither firm appears in the campaign’s filings.

The CLC also claims that it uncovered Federal Communications Commission records showing that Trump campaign ads are placed by Harris Sikes Media, but the campaign has not reported any payments to the firm during this election cycle.

While it is not unusual for campaigns to omit some third-party vendor payments — such as a media company subcontracting a videographer — Fischer called these instances “a well-orchestrated scheme designed to undermine laws and transparency requirements.”

“Trump took it to another level,” Fischer said. “Those recipients weren’t simply sub-vendors. They didn’t take directions from Parscale’s companies. They took directions directly from the Trump campaign. They worked for the Trump campaign, and the campaign tried to hide it.”

The Trump campaign also reports paying approximately $48,000 a month for “strategy consulting” to Parscale Strategy, the consulting firm founded by former Trump campaign manager Brad Parscale. Multiple media reports say that Parscale Strategy itself is a conduit for salary payments to Lara Trump and Guilfoyle, though those salaries combined account for only $30,000 a month.

“The big problem is we can’t know how much was spent and where it was spent,” Fischer said. “For instance, the campaign could be covering up unlawful coordination with independent groups, such as super PACs and dark money organizations. It’s illegal to use common vendors, and we don’t know.”

“Or take the example of Cambridge Analytica from 2016,” he said. “We might not know whether the campaign is working with a potentially problematic digital operation.”

Fischer listed a number of other examples, such as additional payments to the Trump Organization or other Trump-linked entities.

“This campaign has a history of keeping certain transactions off the books,” he said, pointing to the hush-money payments to Stormy Daniels which landed former Trump “fixer” Michael Cohen behind bars. “What else isn’t being disclosed? We don’t know, and Trump’s donors don’t know how their money is being spent.”

However, the mystery won’t be solved any time soon. Fischer speculates that the FEC won’t be able to fully unravel all of the issues until 2022 or 2023.

"Complaints this complicated usually remain pending for two to three years,” he said.

https://www.rawstory.com/2020/07/trump-campaign-masked-170-million-in-illegal-payments-watchdog/



Trump storms out after CNN's Kaitlan Collins puts him to shame for promoting a quack doctor




Donald Trump abruptly ended his press briefing on Tuesday when CNN reporter Kaitlan Collins pressed him on his promotion of a quack doctor’s dangerous claims about COVID-19.

On Monday night, Trump shared a video of the doctor who falsely claimed hydroxychloroquine is a “cure” for COVID-19 and that it obviated the need to wear masks or undertake other mitigation measures during the pandemic. Some of her claims were clearly wrong on their face — it’s important to reduce the risk of catching diseases even if we have a cure for them — and top experts argue that the evidence continues to give little indication that hydroxychloroquine is effective against the virus. The video Trump shared was so dangerously wrong that social media platforms began removing it.

Subsequent reporting revealed that the doctor in the video is a complete quack — she has previously promoted claims about alien DNA and demon sperm.

“The woman that you said is a ‘great doctor’ in that video that you retweeted last night said that masks don’t work and there’s a cure for COVID-19, both of which experts say is not true,” Collins told Trump during the evening briefing. “She’s also made videos saying that doctors make medicine using DNA from aliens and that they’re trying to make a vaccine to make you immune from becoming religious. So, what’s the logic in retweeting that?”

Trump shook his head and looked down.

“I can tell you this,” he said. “She was on air with many other doctors. They were big fans of hydroxychloroquine. And I thought she was very impressive in the sense that where she came — I don’t know what country she comes from — but she’s said that she’s had tremendous success with hundreds of different patients. And I thought her voice was an important voice, but I know nothing about her.”

Trump tried to move on to another reporter, but Collins had a follow-up. As she tried to cut in, he clearly grew annoyed. He decided to give up on getting a question from another reporter, said only, ‘Thank you very much, everybody,” and quickly left the room.

Watch the exchange below:


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Re: Trump supporters and conspiracy theory - Part 2
« Reply #1063 on: July 29, 2020, 01:18:28 PM »