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Donald Trump Claims Muslims Celebrated 9/11 Attacks
“People saw it”, Trump said at a campaign rally in Sarasota, Fla.
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“The problem is, he’s using what he’s got to such a bad degree, I think it’s disgraceful”, Trump said, saying The New York Times should apologize to him.
Republican US presidential frontrunner Donald Trump today refused to take back claims he saw Muslims cheering in New Jersey after the September 11, 2001 attacks, despite a lack of proof. Kasich said, “He’s very divisive and I do not believe he will last”.
“You have a huge Muslim population between Paterson and different places and Jersey City – an unbelievable, large population”, he said, adding Muslims at soccer games and “all around the world” celebrated the attacks.
But Trump says he has sources to the contrary.
The Republican front-runner for the presidential nomination, Donald Trump, is not prepared to be the nation’s commander in chief, because he’s “uninformed” on major issues facing the U.S, especially defense and foreign affairs, rival Jeb Bush said on Sunday.
The Republican presidential candidate said the “dancing in the streets” could have been in Paterson, New Jersey, and not Jersey City.
In an op-ed in EBONY magazine published Friday, pastors, seminary professors and Christian activists critical of Trump asked the group backing the candidate to consider the impact that endorsing him could have on their congregations. He said that “hundreds of people” saw it and that “tailgate parties” were also reported. “But he represents the country we have become”, she said Wednesday on Facebook. Turns out, both NYT and the Trump campaign may have jumped the gun. “I would never mock a person that has difficulties”.
Video had shown the 69-year-old appearing to question the credentials of Pulitzer-prize-winning reporter Serge Kovaleski, who suffers from congenital arthrogryposis, which interferes with movement of the limbs.
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In the letter, the group wrote that “Trump’s racially inaccurate, insensitive and incendiary rhetoric should give those charged with the care of the spirits and souls of black people great pause”. This seems to be a little contradictory when compared to his earlier statement on Trump, where he labeled even the prospect of the business mogul becoming America’s next president as “scary”. According to The Atlantic, Carson’s political career launched with a keynote speech at the National Prayer Breakfast in February 2013, which turned him into a conservative media darling nearly overnight.